Publication Department
Primary Function
The primary function of the publication department is to obtain, create, and publish content for our website and bookstore. In addition to books, papers, and other publications, we collect unpublished papers, topic summaries, and materials that may be of interest to teachers and students who are looking for Ideas. For example, scholars often have outlines of books or papers they want to write, but have not had the time to do so. We archive the outline in the JWT Memorial Library, hoping that somebody else will take up the project.
Ongoing Projects
- Select public domain Christian writings for digital reprinting, format manuscripts, and publish interactive content.
- Manage retail distribution and revenue generation for published work;
- Online bookstore;Â
- Negotiate with authors; andÂ
- Oversee other retail distribution and affiliates agreements.
Help us pick which public domain books to republish
Completed books and papers
Flint, Robert. Agnosticism. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons, 1903.
Our in process list
Bell, B. I. (1931). Unfashionable Convictions. New York and London: Harper & Brothers Publishers.
Fairbairn, A. M. (1902). The Philosophy of the Christian Religion. New York: The Macmillan Company; London: Hodder and Stoughton.
These works are essential for seminarians, historians, and those engaged in high-level cultural apologetics.
Ash-Wednesday   Â
T.S. Eliot,1930Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
This poem marks Eliot’s conversion to Anglo-Catholicism. It is a profound, scholarly meditation on the struggle of the soul toward God, echoing Bell’s own journey through the “waste land” of modernism.
The Everlasting ManÂ
G.K. Chesterton,1925Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
A direct challenge to H.G. Wells’ secular history of the world. Chesterton argues that Christianity is not just another “fashionable” philosophy, but a unique, supernatural eruption into human history.
Orthodoxy      Â
G.K. Chesterton, 1908Â
Perhaps the closest spiritual cousin to Bell’s Unfashionable Convictions. It is a masterpiece of Christian apologetics, defending the “thrilling romance” of traditional dogma against the dullness of secularism.
The Pilgrim Church
E. H. Broadbent (1931)
A monumental history of “independent” Christianity outside the state-church structures. It provides a rare and meticulously researched genealogy of dissenting groups (Waldensians, Paulicians, Anabaptists) that is frequently cited by church historians but often difficult to find in a high-quality, modern edition. It offers an “unfashionable” but vital alternative perspective on church history that resonates with modern “house church” and non-denominational movements.
Christianity and Liberalism
 J. Gresham Machen (1923)
The defining text of the Fundamentalist-Modernist controversy. Machen’s thesis—that “Liberalism” is not a version of Christianity but a separate religion entirely—remains one of the most logically rigorous critiques of secularized faith ever written.
The Return of Christendom
Maurice Reckitt et al. (1922)
A collection of essays by prominent Anglo-Catholics and Christian Socialists (with an introduction by G.K. Chesterton). It argues for a total restructuring of society based on Catholic social principles. It is a “lost” classic of Christian political theory that anticipated many modern discussions on “Post-Liberalism” and the “Benedict Option.”
The King’s Highway
G. D. Carleton (1924)
Widely considered the “gold standard” for Anglo-Catholic manuals of instruction. It covers dogma, liturgy, and the interior life with a clarity and firm conviction that is rarely seen in modern “broad” church literature.
Borden of Yale ’09
Mrs. Howard Taylor (1926)
The biography of William Whiting Borden, a millionaire heir who gave away his fortune to become a missionary to Muslims in China, only to die in Egypt at age 25. This is a premier example of 20th-century missionary hagiography. Its “No Reserves, No Retreats, No Regrets” message is a powerful devotional tool for modern youth ministries.
The Catholic Religion 1920s
Vernon Staley
A foundational manual for Anglican and Episcopal members.
A Manual of Church History
F.X. Funk
Originally published in German (Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte), this manual became a foundational textbook in seminaries and universities globally. It is prized for its conciseness and objective tone.