Christianity
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Becoming Mature: A Practical Guide for Disciples of Jesus
Are you growing or just going through the motions?Spiritual growth doesn’t happen by accident—it requires intentionality, perseverance, and a deep relationship with God. BECOMING mature: A Practical Guide for Disciples of Jesus by Matik Nicholls is a transformative resource for believers seeking real growth and a deeper walk with Christ.
Drawing from decades of personal struggle, failure, and redemption, Nicholls offers a real-world guide to spiritual maturity. Once a church leader trapped in secret sin, he walked away from his faith—until a life-changing encounter with God’s radical love led him home.
Now a discipleship coach, Bible plan creator, and spiritual formation teacher, Nicholls walks readers through the stages of growth, addressing identity, intimacy with God, wholeness, dependence, resilience and purpose
Rooted in scripture and personal experience, BECOMING mature challenges you to move beyond superficial faith into a life of deep trust, radical love, and unwavering discipleship to Jesus.
No matter which stream of the faith you are from, whether you’re a new believer, battling stagnation, or seeking more of God, this book provides practical tools to help you grow.
Written with hard-won wisdom from life’s trenches, this is for those ready to break free and mature in Christ.
Start living with purpose, power, and maturity!
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Don’t Forget We’re Here Forever: A New Generation’s Search for Religion
*A 2025 HIGHLIGHT FOR: Telegraph, Financial Times, New Statesman, Irish Times, Elle and GQ*‘Captivating. A Pilgrim’s Progress for our time’ Telegraph
‘Spellbinding. An incredible exploration of how young people are navigating the complex world we find ourselves in today’ Katy Hessel, author of The Story of Art without Men
‘A book of rare quality. Ash is a writer of exceptional grace and energy’ Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury
Why are young people in Britain today turning to faith in our age of uncertainty?
Lamorna Ash was raised with about as much Christianity as most people in Britain these days: a basic knowledge of hymns and prayers received via a Church of England primary school education; occasional brushes with religious services. But once she started writing about her two friends’ unexpected conversions, she began encountering a recurring phenomenon: in an age of disconnection and apathy, a new generation was discovering religion for itself.
In Don’t Forget We’re Here Forever, Ash embarks on a journey across Britain to meet those wrestling with Christianity today. Through interviews and her own deeply personal journey with religion, and from Evangelical youth festivals to Quaker meetings, a silent Jesuit retreat along the Welsh coastline to a monastic community in the Inner Hebrides, she investigates what drives young people in the twenty-first century to embrace Christianity. Written with lyrical beauty and sensitivity, this is a reminder of our universal need for nourishment of the soul.
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£4.80 -
Don’t Forget We’re Here Forever: A New Generation’s Search for Religion
*A 2025 HIGHLIGHT FOR: Telegraph, Financial Times, New Statesman, Irish Times, Elle and GQ*
‘Captivating. A Pilgrim’s Progress for our time’ Telegraph
‘Spellbinding. An incredible exploration of how young people are navigating the complex world we find ourselves in today’ Katy Hessel, author of The Story of Art without Men
‘A book of rare quality. Ash is a writer of exceptional grace and energy’ Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury
Why are young people in Britain today turning to faith in our age of uncertainty?
Lamorna Ash was raised with about as much Christianity as most people in Britain these days: a basic knowledge of hymns and prayers received via a Church of England primary school education; occasional brushes with religious services. But once she started writing about her two friends’ unexpected conversions, she began encountering a recurring phenomenon: in an age of disconnection and apathy, a new generation was discovering religion for itself.
In Don’t Forget We’re Here Forever, Ash embarks on a journey across Britain to meet those wrestling with Christianity today. Through interviews and her own deeply personal journey with religion, and from Evangelical youth festivals to Quaker meetings, a silent Jesuit retreat along the Welsh coastline to a monastic community in the Inner Hebrides, she investigates what drives young people in the twenty-first century to embrace Christianity. Written with lyrical beauty and sensitivity, this is a reminder of our universal need for nourishment of the soul.
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£17.80£20.90 -
Don’t Forget We’re Here Forever: A New Generation’s Search for Religion (Audio Download): Lamorna Ash, Lamorna Ash, Bloomsbury Publishing: Amazon.co.uk: Books
Bloomsbury presents Don’t Forget We’re Here Forever, written and read by Lamorna Ash.
*A 2025 HIGHLIGHT FOR: Telegraph, Financial Times, New Statesman, Irish Times, Elle and GQ*
‘Spellbinding. An incredible exploration of how young people are navigating the complex world we find ourselves in today’ Katy Hessel, author of The Story of Art without Men
‘A book of rare quality. Ash is a writer of exceptional grace and energy’ Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury
Why are young people in Britain today turning to faith in our age of uncertainty?
Lamorna Ash was raised with about as much Christianity as most people in Britain these days: a basic knowledge of hymns and prayers received via a Church of England primary school education; occasional brushes with religious services. But once she started writing about her two friends’ unexpected conversions, she began encountering a recurring phenomenon: in an age of disconnection and apathy, a new generation was discovering religion for itself.
In Don’t Forget We’re Here Forever, Ash embarks on a journey across Britain to meet those wrestling with Christianity today. Through interviews and her own deeply personal journey with religion, and from Evangelical youth festivals to Quaker meetings, a silent Jesuit retreat along the Welsh coastline to a monastic community in the Inner Hebrides, she investigates what drives young people in the twenty-first century to embrace Christianity. Written with lyrical beauty and sensitivity, this is a reminder of our universal need for nourishment of the soul.
Read more
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God is an Englishman: Christianity and the Creation of England
‘Allows us to understand the profound, and often profoundly beneficial, impact of Christianity’ Anthony Seldon
‘Superb … Lively and erudite’ The Telegraph
‘Tremendous … The arguments are truly profound’ The Spectator
Christianity in England is in decline. Congregations are dwindling and ever fewer young people believe. Should we merely shrug our shoulders and accept this as inevitable and even healthy, or is something important being lost?
Bijan Omrani argues that this decline is the most momentous change to occur in English history. He shows how a religion that has been part of our national story for over 1700 years was instrumental in the creation and development of the English nation, its codes of law and morality, and its structures of government and kingship. He demonstrates its profound cultural impact, in areas ranging from architecture and literature to our very landscape and the structure of our everyday life and language. Its influence, he contends, has been enormous, largely benign, and shouldn’t be lightly abandoned.
Ending with a rousing call to retain Christianity, rightly understood, as a way of dealing with both the eternal questions of the human condition, as well as the malaises of modernity, this is an erudite and tender tribute to our Christian history and heritage.
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£13.30