Books

For Ordinary Believers Called into an Extraordinary Kingdom

OUR PUBLISHED WORKS

Entering Christ’s Mission: A Reformed Theology and Method of Missions

A Theology of Missions That Touches Real Life

Jesus’ Gospel of the Kingdom by Steven Miller

Entering Christ’s Mission gathers years of pastoral, missionary, and teaching experience into one comprehensive volume. It is written from within the Reformed Theology of Biblical Missions and Presbyterian tradition, but with a warmth and practicality that invites the whole church to engage.

In this book, you’ll find:

  • A Theology of Christian Missions That Touches Real Life
  • A thoroughly biblical foundation for the church’s missionary calling
  • Reflection on the aim and motive of missions, anchored in the glory of God
  • A clear explanation of what it means to plant churches that are indigenous—self-governing, self-supporting, and self-propagating
  • Careful attention to culture: how the gospel confronts, corrects, and redeems it
  • Case studies and reflections from real mission work, woven into the theology

Why It Matters

Many Christians sense that missions is important, but feel unsure where they fit or how to think about it biblically. Entering Christ’s Mission helps:

  • Pastors and elders lead congregations into deeper mission engagement
  • Missionaries and mission candidates clarify their theology and methods
  • Students and laypeople see how the Reformed Theology of Biblical Missions connects directly to global mission

Above all, the book seeks to magnify Christ and to call His church to faithful, thoughtful obedience to His Great Commission.

The Common Man’s Confession

by Steven Miller (April 6, 1973, Covenant College)

The Common Man’s Confession by Steven Miller was originally written as a work of theological reflection during Steven Miller’s college years. The Common Man’s Confession is a clear, Scripture-saturated summary of “Jesus’ Gospel of the Kingdom.”

This confession:

  • Traces the story of redemption through God’s covenants
  • Presents Jesus as the fulfillment of the entire Old Testament pattern
  • Helps believers see the structure of the gospel from adoption to consummation
  • Uses simple, biblical language rather than technical jargon
  • It is written especially for “ordinary” people who want to understand and confess Christ more clearly

It is not meant to replace Scripture, but to act as a roadmap—a guide that sends readers back into the Bible with new clarity and greater hunger for God’s Word.