This book is a great selection of questions and answers, divided into 27 different sections. There are 306 unique questions answered in the collection.
The Table of Contents are as follows: Section I: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THE BIBLE Section II: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT CHRIST Section III: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT CHRISTIANS Section IV: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT CONFESSION Section V: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON FAITH Section VI: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON FASTING Section VII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON FORGIVENESS Section VIII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT GOD Section IX: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON HEAVEN Section X: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT THE HOLY SPIRIT Section XI: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THE INTERPRETATION OF NEW TESTAMENT SCRIPTURES Section XII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THE INTERPRETATION OF OLD TESTAMENT SCRIPTURES Section XIII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT THE JUDGMENT, MILLENNIUM, AND TRIBULATION Section XIV: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON MARRIAGE Section XV: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT MONEY Section XVI: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON PRAYER Section XVII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON REGENERATION Section XVIII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THE SABBATH Section XIX: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THE SACRAMENTS OF THE CHURCH Section XX: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON SANCTIFICATION AND HOLINESS Section XXI: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THE SECOND COMING Section XXII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON SIN Section XXIII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THEOLOGY Section XXIV: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON TITHES Section XXV: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT THE TRINITY Section XXVI: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT THE UNPARDONABLE SIN Section XXVII: QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT WAR
About the author (from Wikipedia): James Blaine Chapman (1884-1947) was a minister, president of Arkansas Holiness and Peniel Colleges, editor of the Herald of Holiness, and general superintendent in the Church of the Nazarene.
Chapman was born 1884 in Yale, Illinois, the second son and fifth child in his family. The family moved to Oklahoma when he was fourteen years old, where he was converted to Christianity in 1899. Chapman's first academic instructor was his wife, a schoolteacher. When he took a pastorate at Vilonia, Arkansas in 1908, he enrolled at the Arkansas Holiness College there at age 24. After graduating in 1910, he left to pursue further study at Texas Holiness University in Peniel, Texas under president Roy T. Williams, where he received his bachelor's of divinity degree in 1913. Peniel College later awarded him an honorary doctor of divinity degree, in 1918, and Pasadena College did the same in 1927.
He began to preach at the age of sixteen, uniting with the World's Faith Missionary Association of Shenandoah, Iowa and then the Texas Holiness Association before forming his own Independent Holiness Church. He married Maud Frederick in 1903, at the church's first annual convention. His first pastorate was a church in Durant, in Indian Territory, which he organized in 1905 and would become part of the Holiness Church of Christ, but he also became pastor of a church in Pilot Point, Texas in 1907, for which he left Durant in 1908. That same year the Holiness Church of Christ joined the Pentecostal Church of the Nazarene, and Chapman moved again, this time to a pastorate at Vilonia, Arkansas. He left in 1911 after graduating from Arkansas Holiness College to pursue further education at Texas Holiness University. His only other pastorate would later be at Bethany, Oklahoma from 1918-1919.
Chapman would later become editor of the Herald of Holiness from 1921 to 1928 and was then elected general superintendent. He joined the Nazarene community of Quincy, Massachusetts in 1930, and served as general superintendent until his death in 1947.
A residential dorm on the campus of Olivet Nazarene University is named after Chapman.