|
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hardcover:
$36.00 |
Born in 1918 in New England, ROSLYN LUCE SADLER grew up
on the two islands of Cuba and Martha's Vineyard. She attended a school of fashion and costume
design in New York and then, to her surprise the Hartford Seminary Foundation in Connecticut
before she and her husband sailed for Africa in 1941. After packing suitcases for scores of
new addresses Roslyn began to write her story, inspired by a bundle of letters unpacked from her
suitcase in her latest home, the Usambara mountains of Tanzania, Africa.
Horses, a pledge, and words becoming bridges made Roslyn Luce Sadler's story possible. Her story is also about faith as it quietly knit the lives of a man and girl into far-reaching bridges joining people within Africa and around the world.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Softcover: $25.00 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
ISBN |
BERYL RAMSEY SAND heard the Spirit's call to serve as a
missionary in Africa at the age of fifteen. Ten years later, in May of 1944 and in the midst of
World War II, she arrived in Africa, where she met and married Rev. Lloyd Sand.
Beryl Sand worked as a nurse, as a literacy teacher, and she assisted in writing the first Bible teaching material in the Gbaya language. Beryl is the mother of three daughters and one son. Endowed with the gift of music, Beryl and Lloyd translated and performed many Gospel songs in the Gbaya language as part of their ministry in Africa and their mission presentations during furlough in the U.S. In this book Beryl chronicles her life in Africa through her memories and letters as she continues "Singing I Go!" |
ISBN |
In 1951 Adeline Lundquist Hult was called as missionary teacher to work with a Chinese church in British North Borneo. "Passport to Borneo" is her story of the four years she worked there during the years of restoration after World War II. She shares her experiences of living abroad for the first time and the joys, frustrations, and adaptations necessary to cope with life in a multi-cultural colony. ADELINE LUNDQUIST HULT was born on a farm near Lindsborg, Kansas. She graduated from Bethany College, Lindsborg, with a teaching degree. Upon her return from North Borneo, she married Dr. John Hult and spent four years in Tanganyika, East Africa, where John served as a medical missionary. She now lives in Corvallis, Oregon.
|
|
$ 12.00 |
A
Book of Life Every life is a book waiting to be written. A BOOK OF LIFE brings joy to the eye and to the heart. Katrine Stewart's insights into the art of journal keeping entertain as well as challenge us to sit down and begin our very own "book of life" in word and image. The author describes fun and practical ways in which to capture our fragmented modern lives and also emphasizes the role of the journal as a time-tested tool for spiritual discernment. KATRINE STEWART is the mother of three daughters and two sons. Married to a U.S. diplomat, she has lived with her family in India, Romania, the Bahamas, Pakistan, Germany, Mexico, and Trinidad and Tobago. This book is an ideal companion gift to any new journal. |
|
$ 12.00
|
Paul's
Letter Collection "I invite you to join me on a journey back into history. I will introduce you to the oldest surviving hand-written editions of the letters of Paul. We will then visit ancient editors of letter collections and ask them to assist us in interpreting the work of their Christian colleagues. ... And of course, we will spend some time with Paul, the apostle." —From the author’s introduction "The book offers a completely new picture of the origins of the New Testament. And, because it is written in uncomplicated language, reading it is a pleasure." —Gerd Theißen, Heidelberg University David Trobisch taught at the University of Heidelberg, Missouri State University, and Yale Divinity School. He is presently the Throckmorton-Hayes Professor of New Testament at Bangor Theological Seminary in Maine.
|
$ 16.00 |
Dr. Wilder is helping men and women alike understand the stages in a man's
life, his place in history, and creative ways to negotiate from one stage
to the next. With this wisdom, a man can reach maturity as a father who is
a life-giver, as an elder who blesses the church and fathers spiritual
children.
Dr. E. James Wilder, a licensed clinical psychologist, is an ordained minister and director of Shepherd's House Counseling Center in Van Nuys, California. Dr. Wilder is also the author of
|
![]()
$ 14.00 |
“Man is suffering, but woman don’t know it.” I once saw these words
painted on a small bus in The unfinished manuscript lay on his desk at the time of his sudden death. The first two chapters were written in his generous longhand with notes on the margin to be included in his second draft. The final section, “The Free Man,” was found only in skeleton form—like the bare bones of a tree in winter that give us only the form of how beautiful the tree would be in spring, summer, and fall. The last part of the book is the answer to the first two. Ingrid Trobisch |
|