A living Sacrifice
Suppose you had been called to missionary service for the early Seventh-day Adventist Church.
The average term of service for the first 214 missionaries in China was just seven years. The average was so low because roughly 1 in 5 died during that time.
In West Africa, "the casualty rate among missionaries was so high that in the late 19th century they were expected to live just two years."
Debilitating illnesses and untimely deaths were the prices to be paid for evangelizing the Inter-American region.
Adventist Missionaries were beginning to penetrate East Asia and were suffering the consequences.
Too often, we tell only the same few stories from Adventist history, of Ellen and James White, Joseph Bates, John Andrews, Uriah Smith, and the first generation of pioneers. To these we occasionally add the stories of a few famous twentieth-century figures, major church leaders.

Yet our history is deep and wide and full of stories we never tell because we don't remember them: extraordinary stories, of dedicated missionaries who risked their lives—but did so because they had put their lives in the hands of the Holy Spirit. They were willing to risk danger, deprivation, disease and death, and in many cases, they truly gave their all, so that the prophetic messages of the angels of Revelation 14 might be proclaimed, that this church might be built and Jesus lifted up around the world. These ordinary women and men are the makers of the modern, worldwide Adventist Church.

Author and church historian David Trim shares stories of these missionaries. Most were young. Many were women. Some were committed laypeople, and several were self-supporting.
1132451375
A living Sacrifice
Suppose you had been called to missionary service for the early Seventh-day Adventist Church.
The average term of service for the first 214 missionaries in China was just seven years. The average was so low because roughly 1 in 5 died during that time.
In West Africa, "the casualty rate among missionaries was so high that in the late 19th century they were expected to live just two years."
Debilitating illnesses and untimely deaths were the prices to be paid for evangelizing the Inter-American region.
Adventist Missionaries were beginning to penetrate East Asia and were suffering the consequences.
Too often, we tell only the same few stories from Adventist history, of Ellen and James White, Joseph Bates, John Andrews, Uriah Smith, and the first generation of pioneers. To these we occasionally add the stories of a few famous twentieth-century figures, major church leaders.

Yet our history is deep and wide and full of stories we never tell because we don't remember them: extraordinary stories, of dedicated missionaries who risked their lives—but did so because they had put their lives in the hands of the Holy Spirit. They were willing to risk danger, deprivation, disease and death, and in many cases, they truly gave their all, so that the prophetic messages of the angels of Revelation 14 might be proclaimed, that this church might be built and Jesus lifted up around the world. These ordinary women and men are the makers of the modern, worldwide Adventist Church.

Author and church historian David Trim shares stories of these missionaries. Most were young. Many were women. Some were committed laypeople, and several were self-supporting.
7.99 In Stock
A living Sacrifice

A living Sacrifice

by David Trim
A living Sacrifice

A living Sacrifice

by David Trim

eBook

$7.99 

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Overview

Suppose you had been called to missionary service for the early Seventh-day Adventist Church.
The average term of service for the first 214 missionaries in China was just seven years. The average was so low because roughly 1 in 5 died during that time.
In West Africa, "the casualty rate among missionaries was so high that in the late 19th century they were expected to live just two years."
Debilitating illnesses and untimely deaths were the prices to be paid for evangelizing the Inter-American region.
Adventist Missionaries were beginning to penetrate East Asia and were suffering the consequences.
Too often, we tell only the same few stories from Adventist history, of Ellen and James White, Joseph Bates, John Andrews, Uriah Smith, and the first generation of pioneers. To these we occasionally add the stories of a few famous twentieth-century figures, major church leaders.

Yet our history is deep and wide and full of stories we never tell because we don't remember them: extraordinary stories, of dedicated missionaries who risked their lives—but did so because they had put their lives in the hands of the Holy Spirit. They were willing to risk danger, deprivation, disease and death, and in many cases, they truly gave their all, so that the prophetic messages of the angels of Revelation 14 might be proclaimed, that this church might be built and Jesus lifted up around the world. These ordinary women and men are the makers of the modern, worldwide Adventist Church.

Author and church historian David Trim shares stories of these missionaries. Most were young. Many were women. Some were committed laypeople, and several were self-supporting.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161215913
Publisher: Pacific Press Publishing Association
Publication date: 07/10/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 732,083
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

D.J.B. Trim was born in Bombay, India, to missionary parents and spent his childhood in Sydney, Australia. Educated in Australia and England, he earned a BA in history from Newbold College and a PhD in history from King’s College in London. Trim was on the faculty of Newbold College for a decade and held the Walter C. Utt Chair in History at Pacific Union College. He has also held visiting fellowships at the Huntington Library, the Folger Shakespeare Library, the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. In 2003 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. A prolific author, Trim has edited or coedited 10 books, and his other publications include more than 150 articles and chapters in scholarly journals, popular magazines, and books. He has served as director of the Office of Archives, Statistics, and Research since 2010.
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