-
Jesus Freaks, Revised and Updated Edition (DC Talk and Voice of the Martyrs)
Remember those in prison, as if you were there yourself. Remember also those being mistreated, as if you felt their pain in your own bodies (Hebrews 13:3).
These are the stories–including new, recent stories–of our brothers and sisters in Christ who have been imprisoned, mistreated, or killed because they chose to follow Jesus Christ and boldly proclaim His name.
Their stories inspire each of us to examine our heart and consider our own walk with Christ. Their stories inspire us to ask, How far am I willing to go in order to advance Christ’s kingdom in my neighborhood? My city? My world? Is Jesus worth it?
Their stories MUST be told.
$18.99 -
Missionary Stories from Around the World (Betty Swinford)
Have you ever wanted to travel the world? Perhaps you’d like to visit far away countries and discover all about the people who live there? What if instead, you’d like to have adventures closer to home? Well this book is for you!
$9.99 -
The Power and the Glory (John Stuart Ross)
Born in the northeast of Scotland, John Ross arrived in Manchuria in 1872 and spent 40 years of his life there. He left behind an amazing legacy of culturally sensitive evangelism, established Presbyterian churches, innovative missionary principles, valuable publications, and a rich vein of translations, including the first version of the New Testament in Korean.
John S. Ross’s riveting biography tracks not only his life, but also the social, political and spiritual influences which shaped his life and work. God is still using John Ross’s labors to grow his Kingdom in South and North Korea today.
$22.99 -
John G. Paton: South Sea Island Rescue
In the exhausting heat and humidity of the South Sea Island, John Paton is as far away from his home and family in Scotland as he could be! He knew God had brought him here, to share the good news about Jesus with these natives. But for right now, he had to run for his life and hide! He was risking his life for the work of the Lord – would it turn out to be a good decision?
-
Adoniram Judson: Danger on the Streets of Gold
Judson’s parents, delighted when he turns to Christ, are not nearly so thrilled at his plans to become a missionary to Burma. Even en route, he narrowly escapes pirates and imprisonment, putting he and his young wife Ann in great danger!
The whole Judson story is one of God’s provision and the courageous determination of a committed evangelist, persevering in translating the Scriptures into a strange language and laboring ceaselessly, even when his wife dies. All to bring the gospel to the Burmese people.
-
Gladys Aylward: No Mountain Too High
Few missionaries have experienced the adventure, mystery and danger that Miss Aylward did in her work for the Lord in China. Rescuing children from battle zones during a time when China was war-torn was a secondary goal to her, compared to winning them to Christ.
A woman of great faith who worked against enormous odds to manifest the power of God unto salvation.
Gladys Aylward was born in 1902 in the outskirts of London and was raised in the Anglican church. She was never married, and in 1930 she took a train across Russia to China to help aging missionary Agnes Lawson found an inn. In 1932, the province of Mandarin appointed her “foot-inspector” – a job she used to evangelize villagers all over the province.
Her conduct during a prison riot in 1933 cemented her reputation as a woman of wisdom. She became a Chinese citizen in 1936. During World War 2 she was wounded by Japanese soldiers, only months before leading 100 orphans across a dangerous mountain range to safety. Near death, she recovered by God’s grace to evangelize until the Communists evicted her from China in the late 1940s. “The Small Woman”, as she was called, won international fame in 1957 through the popular movie version of her life, The Inn of the Sixth Happiness. She founded an orphanage in 1958 in Taiwan, where she died in 1970.
-
Hudson Taylor: An Adventure Begins
Hudson Taylor and his sisters, Amelia and Louisa loved adventures. Together they explored the countryside as children – but childhood doesn’t last forever, and when Hudson was 21 years old, he left his home and country to travel halfway around the world, to China!
In this biography for youth, they will learn how his family felt, the dangers he faced, and most important of all, why he went to China in the first place: knowing that countless people there knew nothing of the Lord who said “Go into all the world and preach the gospel.”
-
Isobel Kuhn: Lights in Lisuland (Irene Howat)
There is no nation by the name of Lisuland, but the Lisu are a people group of over one million, who live mostly in China, Burma, and Thailand. When young Isobel Kuhn first went there in 1928, very few of the Lisu people knew anything at all about Jesus Christ.
Today, the Lisu have some of highest numbers of true Christians of any people-group on the globe! The story of Isobel Kuhn is one of history’s greatest incidents of God using a single young woman, despite all her self-doubts, as she relied upon Him to use her to share the love of Christ.
-
The Good News Must Go Out (Rebecca Davis)
From one old woman’s prayer a young girl was brought to faith, a missionary was sent to Africa and then a church was born from among the people of Central Africa. Missionaries from the West came with the message of Jesus Christ – but it was the men and women saved from cannibalism, the young boys who herded goats and who carted water who really brought the Good News even farther to more and more villages and homesteads in Africa — and the Good News must go out.
Read aloud to: ages 6-8
Read on my own: ages 9-14$8.99 -
Helen Roseveare: On His Majesty’s Service
Qualified as a doctor, Helen Roseveare packed up her life in England and set off to be a missionary in the Belgian Congo, to set up hospitals and rural clinics. In work that took Helen on long journeys through dense forests, she endured many trials, including a lengthy imprisonment during the Simba Rebellion.
But she continued her work in the re-named nation of Zaire, believing that the work of the kingdom of God supercedes any politics by which men merely change the name of nations. Through her work with nurses, midwives and health workers, she spread the good news of Jesus Christ.
-
A Reluctant Missionary (Margaret Hayes)
God’s call was loud, clear and insistent: she was to go the Congo. So, what was a recently qualified, ambitious young woman to make of this? She had a speech impediment, she would need more training, and where would the money for all this come from?
But when Margaret yielded to His will and plan for her life, she began an amazing journey of adventure and faith, experiencing a range of incredible difficulties and wonderful answers to prayer. Born in London, she served for many years in the Congo and in the Republic of Niger.
$13.00 -
Hudson Taylor: Gospel Pioneer to China (Vance Christie)
Vance Christie has written an excellent biography of one of the greatest missionaries of all time. His lively style captures the drama, the danger, and the dedication of this “little” man whose faith in God enabled him to accomplish so much. Readers of all ages will be enthralled by the story of God’s remarkable work in and through Hudson Taylor and the China Inland Mission, which Chinese Christians today gladly acknowledge as essential to the growth of perhaps the largest church on earth.
$16.99
FREE DELIVERY
When ordering from $500.