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InterVarsity Press is pleased to announce that they will be partnering with Rain Ministries to serve as the official publisher of First Nations Version of the full New Testament, which is scheduled to release in 2021. The First Nations Version of the New Testament is a new translation, attempting to capture the simplicity, clarity, and beauty of our Native storytellers in English, while remaining faithful to the original language of the New Testament.
View press kits, reviews, and book information for Spring 2020 titles.
View press kits, reviews, and book information for Winter 2019 titles.
Saint Nicholas the Giftgiver, the first title to release from IVP Kids on October 12, has won the 2021 Bronze Moonbeam Children's Book Award in the picture book category for ages four to eight.
In this riveting interview, Vince Bantu upends the misconception that Christianity is becoming a global religion and explains how it in fact has always been so.
View press kits, reviews, and book information for Spring 2022 titles.
Blood from a Stone: A Memoir of How Wine Brought Me Back from the Dead, written by Adam McHugh, has made the longlist for the prestigious André Simon Food and Drink Book Awards.
InterVarsity Press (IVP) and IVP Kids will be releasing its first middle grade fiction series. Don Everts, a prolific nonfiction author for IVP, has signed a three-book contract with IVP Kids for the Argus Sensates series. The first book in the series, tentatively titled Bubbles and the Argus Sensates, will release in Spring 2026.
Your church is situated in a particular neighborhood with unique needs and opportunities. How is your congregation engaging with your community? These books consider place-based ministry and how churches can partner with their surrounding neighbors for the greater good.
Reader's Choice Award Winner
Most Christians have heard a familiar description of the Samaritan woman in John 4: she was a sinner, an adulteress, even a prostitute. Throughout church history, the woman at the well has been seen narrowly in terms of her gender and marital history. What are we missing in the story? And what difference does our interpretation ...