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Banner of Truth

Banner of Truth

Founded in 1957 by Iain H. Murray and a small group of like-minded pastors and scholars, the Banner of Truth Trust is a Reformed evangelical publisher devoted to recovering and spreading the riches of historic, biblical Christianity. Based in Edinburgh and Carlisle, Pennsylvania, the Trust was established to make the great works of the Puritans, Reformers, and classic evangelical writers accessible to a new generation. Its mission remains centred on the glory of God, the authority of Scripture, and the spiritual health of the church.

Banner of Truth is distinguished by its theological integrity, editorial care, and enduring craftsmanship. Its commentaries and reprints—featuring authors such as John Owen, Jonathan Edwards, and Robert Haldane—combine doctrinal precision with devotional depth. Each volume is produced to reflect permanence in both content and presentation, embodying the conviction that truth and beauty belong together in Christian publishing.

Volumes from this publisher are consistently dependable for serious students of Scripture

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Flowers From A Puritan’s Garden

Advanced students / scholars, Busy pastors, General readers, Lay readers / small groups, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
8.2
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We sometimes need short, well aimed readings that warm the heart and steady the mind.

This collection gathers Puritan and Reformed devotional extracts curated around spiritual themes, offering concentrated sentences that repay slow reflection.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

The strength of a good anthology is not novelty but focus. It helps us to linger on Scripture shaped truth when our attention is thin and our schedules are full.

Used wisely, this kind of book can serve morning meditation, family worship, and sermon preparation, supplying clear turns of phrase that awaken affection for Christ.

As with any selection, it is best read with Bible open, so that the fragments drive us back to the whole counsel of God rather than becoming detached mottos.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend it as a gentle companion volume, especially for pastors who need short portions that still carry spiritual weight.

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Duties Of Christian Fellowship

Mid-levelAdvanced students / scholars, Busy pastors, General readers, Lay readers / small groups, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
8.3
Author: John Owen
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We need books that teach us how to live together as Christians, not only how to think as Christians.

In this short volume, John Owen presses the ordinary duties of church life, love, patience, forbearance, encouragement, and mutual watchfulness, and he does so with a firm grip on the gospel that creates that fellowship.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are tempted to treat fellowship as atmosphere rather than obedience. Owen will not let us. He shows how communion with Christ necessarily overflows into communion with His people, and how private religion that refuses the church quickly becomes self made religion.

The counsel is searching without being clever. It exposes pride, coldness, and party spirit, then calls us back to the slow work of bearing one another’s burdens in faith and love.

For elders and ministry teams, it is especially useful, because it gives language for addressing relational drift before it becomes a fracture.

Closing Recommendation

We commend this as a quick, weighty read for leaders who want to strengthen the bonds of congregational life.

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The Fear Of God

IntroductoryGeneral readers, Lay readers / small groupsTop choice
8.5
Author: John Bunyan
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We find Bunyan simple, direct, and piercing. He shows that the fear of the Lord is not slavish dread, but reverent, loving awe.

We are helped as he exposes false religion, then calls us to a faith that trembles at God’s word and trusts His mercy.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We value the pastoral realism. It addresses both presumption and despair, and it keeps the reader close to Scripture rather than opinion.

We also find it useful for catechesis and discipleship, particularly with newer believers learning what true godliness looks like in ordinary life.

We should read it when our churches need reverence without coldness, and confidence without carelessness.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend it warmly. It strengthens worship, deepens repentance, and helps cultivate a steady, joyful seriousness before God.

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Searching Our Hearts In Difficult Times

Mid-levelBusy pastors, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
8.4
Author: John Owen
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We find Owen skilful at spiritual diagnosis, helping us name what is going on beneath the surface in seasons of pressure.

We are not left staring inward as an end. We are redirected to Christ, and to the steady promises of God that hold when feelings wobble.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are helped by careful distinctions that expose self deception and strengthen assurance where it is grounded in the gospel.

We also find material that can be shaped into pastoral questions and gentle counsel for believers who are anxious, weary, or spiritually numb.

We should read it with an open Bible, letting Scripture set the terms for honest self examination.

Closing Recommendation

We commend it for pastors and thoughtful readers who want heart work that ends in renewed faith, clearer repentance, and steadier obedience.

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Select Practical Writings Of Robert Traill

AdvancedAdvanced students / scholars, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
8.4
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We receive this as a concentrated window into Traill’s practical theology, shaped by Scripture and sharpened by pastoral experience.

We find much that strengthens preaching, especially where law and gospel must be handled with care, clarity, and warmth.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are helped by the way these writings keep Christ central while still pressing holiness as the necessary fruit of grace.

We also value the serious tone. It does not entertain, it shepherds, and it rewards readers who slow down and think before God.

We should read it when we want doctrinal precision without coldness, and pastoral urgency without impatience.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend it as a useful supplement, particularly for those who want proclamation that is both searching and consoling.

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An Ark For All God’s Noahs

Mid-levelBusy pastors, General readersStrong recommendation
8.4
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We find Brooks speaking to believers who feel besieged, teaching them to endure with faith and wisdom.

We are given strong consolation without sentimental shortcuts, and sober warnings without despair.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are helped by pastoral counsel that is alert to the heart, clear about spiritual danger, and rich in gospel comfort.

We also benefit from the book as a resource for discipleship conversations, especially with those facing discouragement, accusation, or long seasons of fatigue.

We should read it when we need to remember that Christ keeps His people, even when the waters rise and the days feel long.

Closing Recommendation

We commend it for patient reading. It is a companion for endurance, and a wise guide for steadying others.

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The Incomparableness Of God

Mid-levelBusy pastors, General readersTop choice
8.5
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We are reminded that God is not a bigger version of us. He is holy, glorious, and altogether beyond comparison.

We find Swinnock both devotional and doctrinal, pressing us toward reverence that leads to trust and obedience.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are helped as the book lifts our view of God. That larger sight reshapes fear, corrects priorities, and steadies prayer.

We also appreciate the pastoral usefulness of its categories. It gives language for worship, and it strengthens counsel when people have shrunk God to fit their circumstances.

We should read it when ministry has made God feel small, or when our churches need a deeper sense of His greatness.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend it as a sturdy, God exalting read that strengthens both pulpit and pew, and that keeps returning to Scripture’s own testimony.

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The Glorious Feast of The Gospel

Mid-levelBusy pastors, General readersTop choice
8.6
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We meet Sibbes at his best. He draws weary believers to Christ as the generous host of grace.

We find the tone warmly invitational, yet never casual about sin, and never shallow about holiness.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are helped by the way free grace and serious godliness are held together. The gospel comforts, then the gospel transforms, with no rivalry between them.

We also value how readily this feeds preaching and pastoral counsel, especially when we need to hold out the tenderness of Christ without losing His majesty.

We should read it when we need renewed confidence that mercy is not rationed to penitent sinners.

Closing Recommendation

We warmly commend it for pastors, elders, and any believer who needs steady assurance that the gospel really is good news.

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Preparations For Suffering

Mid-levelBusy pastors, General readersStrong recommendation
8.4
Author: John Flavel
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We are not given easy answers here, but we are given a faithful guide for dark seasons.

We find Flavel tender with the bruised, and steady with the fearful. He helps us interpret hardship under the wise, fatherly providence of God.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are helped by the way Scripture, experience, and doctrine are gathered into counsel that can actually be used, in the hospital room as much as in the study.

We also learn how to prepare before the trial arrives, so that suffering does not become a season of spiritual improvisation.

We should read it slowly, marking prayers, promises, and wise cautions for future pastoral care.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend it as a companion for difficult months. It teaches us to lament honestly, and to hope stubbornly in Christ.

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Gospel Life

Mid-levelBusy pastors, Pastors-in-trainingTop choice
8.6
Author: John Owen
Publisher: Banner of Truth
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Resource Type: Puritans

Summary

We take this as a call to live the Christian life from the gospel, not alongside it.

We find Owen realistic about sin and weakness, yet quietly confident because Christ remains a sufficient Saviour for daily need.

Why Should We Read This Resource?

We are helped as Owen shows how communion with God shapes obedience, assurance, and perseverance. The argument is careful, but the aim is always spiritual.

We also appreciate the way he refuses both harsh legalism and cheap comfort. He teaches us to repent honestly, and to rest gladly in Christ.

We should read it when our spiritual life feels mechanical, or when we need renewed joy in the finished work of the Lord Jesus.

Closing Recommendation

We commend this edition for pastors and serious readers who want gospel depth with real spiritual teeth, and with constant return to Scripture.

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