I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
Saint Thomas, the twin, was one of Jesus’ 12 original disciples/apostles.
Saint Thomas is mentioned three times by name in St. John’s Gospel.
He speaks after the resurrection of Lazarus when Jesus talks about going to Jerusalem. Let us also go, that we may die with him John 11 v16
After Jesus has spoken about preparing a place in heaven he says
Lord, we know not whither thou goest;and how can we know the way?
The third time, the most best known time is after Jesus’ resurrection. This is where he is referred to as ‘doubting’ Thomas. He makes a comment that he will not believe Jesus is alive unless he puts his hands physically into the injured holes in the hands,feet and side of his Lord. Jesus appears and invites Thomas to touch him. My Lord and my God . (He is the first to acknowledge his divinity.)
Jesus goes on to say, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed; blessed are they that have not seen, and yet believed.
Saint Thomas was presumably at both the Ascension and Pentecost.
Thomas’ subsequent history is uncertain. Tradition holds that he took Christianity to Parthia.
The existence of an ancient Christian community on the Malabar Coast of India suggests that he converted their ancestors but was martyred and buried at Mylapore (now part of Madras)
Another story suggests he converted ruler in the Punjab and was by killed in accident by an archer shooting at peacocks.
Sources used
The Church’s Year Charles Alexander
wikipedia
Britannica Online Encyclopedia
The Encyclopedia of Saints by Howard Loxton
Saint Ignatius was bishop of Antioch when he was sentenced to death in the arena of Trajan. For some reason instead of being executed in his home town of Antioch he was escorted to Rome, in chains, by a company of 10 Roman soldiers.
The ship taking him to Rome hugged the coast and Saint Ignatius, in chains, was received with honour by Christians at each port of call.
He wrote 7 letters on his route to Rome to various committees containing instructions on marriage and theology. It is from these letters, which still exist,
that we know what happened to him. Saint Polycarp befriended Saint Ignatius and collected the letters together and sent them to the church of Philippi.
At some point a single Latin version , based on the original text, was made in England in the 13th century.
Saint Ignatius fate was that he was eaten, by lions, in the Colosseum in Rome.
He was probably alive during Jesus’ life time. There was a tradition in the early church that when he was a boy sat at the feet of Jesus. Whoso shall receive one such a little child in my name receiveth me
Saint Ignatius is considered to be one of the three most important Apostolic Fathers.
Sources used
The Church’s Year by Charles Alexander
wikipedia
Britannica Online Encyclopedia
The Encyclopedia of Saints Howard Loxton*
According to apocryphal texts Saint Lucy was a virgin who came from a wealthy Sicilian Family.
A suitor who she refused to marry told the Roman authorities she was a Christian. The authorities first of all sentenced her to be placed in a brothel and forced into prostitution. This order, according to legend, was thwarted by divine intervention
She was next condemned to death by fire - but she proved impervious to flames.
Finally her neck was pierced by a sword and she died.
Lots of images show her with a sword in her neck. Other images focus on her eyes. There are two legends. The first she was tortured by having her eyes torn out. Secondly she removed her own eyes and sent them to her suitor. There are many images showing her eyes on a dish.When she was buried her sight is restored.
Saint Lucy is the patron saint of Syracuse (Sicily), for virgins and sight.
She was one of the earliest Christian saints to achieve popularity.
In Sweden St. Lucy’s day marks the beginning of the Christmas celebrations.
The eldest daughter wears a white gown and a crown wreath studded with candles.
Source
Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Saint Edmund, King of East Anglia, also known as Edmund the Martyr was England’s original Patron Saint.
Aged just 15 in 856 Edmund became king of East Anglia. He rules his kingdom well and spent times restoring churches and monasteries destroyed in previous wars.
In 870 the Danes invaded his kingdom, marching on Mercia. Edmund fought them at Hoxne, about 20 miles from Thetford, and was defeated.
After the battle the Danish leader, Hingwar, demanded the king to hand over his treasure and accept the position of vassal. The king accepted the terms on the condition Hingwar would become a Christian.
What happened next is uncertain. The Danes/Vikings destroyed any contemporary evidence of his reign. Writers later then produced fictional accounts of his life.
Fact or Fiction?
Edmund may have been killed in battle. It is uncertain where he actually died.
OR, according to pictures depicting his death, this angered Hingwar so much that he had him tied up to a tree, shot at with arrows and was then beheaded.
King Edmund became Edmund the Martyr.
Taking the story even further Edmund’s head was thrown into the forest. The searchers hearing the sound of ethereal wolves calling out in Latin ’ Hic Hic Hic’ - in English ’ Here ,here ,here ’ found his head.
Hingwar is referred elsewhere as Ivar the Boneless.
Fact - Edmund’s bones in 902/3 remains were moved to Beodricsworth - modern Bury St. Edmunds where King Athelstan founded a religious community to care for his shrine aaaaand it beacame a place of national pilgrimage.
( read ‘Beodericworth’ paragraph)
Where are the remains now ? ( read Where is St. Edmund?)
King Edmund was a Christian king. He sacrificed his life because he refused to renounce Jesus Christ as his saviour.
The title of ’ * Sensational Evangellst of Britain and America* ’ is given to George Whitefield by *Christianity Today. *
The magazine goes on to say that he is probably the most famous religious figure of the 18th century. He was an English Anglican cleric and evangelist who was one of the founders of the Methodist and evangelical movement.
As a boy he enjoyed reading plays and skipped school to practice for his performances. Later in life he may have repudiated the theatre but in his sermons he portrayed biblical characters with a realism by crying, dancing and screaming - he took the theatre to the pulpit. It brought the crowds ‘out’- most of his sermons were preached outside.
He went to Pembroke college, Oxford as a servitor, the lowest rank of undergraduate - his tuition was free but he acted as a servant to his fellow students. He was part of the ’ Holy Club ’ with John and Charles Wesley.
An illness plus Henry Scougal’s book The life of God in the soul of Man influenced him, He had a religious conversion and became a passionate preacher. The week after his ordination he preached in his home town of Gloucester.
In 1738 he went with the Wesleys to Georgia in the USA as a priest. He decided he wanted to build an orphanage for black children - this became central to his preaching. He came back to the UK to raise money. In 1940 the construction began. He had a theological disagreement. The building bought by the Moravians is today called The Whitefield House.
He preached nearly every day for months to crowds in their thousands with his big booming voice. Benjamin Franklin attended a meeting in Philadephia and estimated George could be heard 500 feet away. On horseback he travelled from New York to Charleston, South Carolina - at the time the longest distance by a white man in North America,
Back in the UK he was met by similar size crowds. The Church of England did not assign him a pulpit so preached in parks and fields.
This itinerant preacher’s career was divided between the American colonies and the whole of the UK.
In 170, aged 55,he made this comment I would rather wear out than rust out.
He preached his last sermon from the top of a large barrel in a field in the colonies. The next morning he died.
Thomas S. Kidd summarized George’s life in the title of his book
*George Whitefield America’s Founding Father * 2014
(For full summary read Veneration and legacy.)
Sources
wikipedia
Britannic Online Encyclopedia
Christianity Today
Saint Hugh of Lincoln was born in Avalon in France - that’s why he also known as Hugh of Avalon.
His mother died when he was only 8. His father, Guillaume, a soldier, decided to retire and together they went to the monastery of Villard-Benoit, near Grenoble Aged 15 Saint Hugh became a religious novice. Aged 19 he was ordained a deacon.
On his father’s death in about 1165 he joined the monks at the Carthusian motherhouse of La Grande Chartreuse near Grenoble. He was ordained a priest and later became procurator of the housse ( c.1170).
In 1179/80 he came to England where he was appointed by Henry11 to be the first prior of the Carthusian house of Witham in Essex. He became bishop of Lincoln in 1186. He was consecrated at Westminster. As both prior and bishop he defended the church’s liberties and gained respect from the monarchy.
In 1185 Lincoln cathedral had been was badly damaged because of an earthquake. Saint Hugh set about rebuilding and greatly enlarging it in the new Gothic style.
He was now one of the premier bishops in the UK and acted as a diplomat… Following visit to La Grande Chartreusein in 1200, to promote peace between King John of England and King Philip Augustus of France, he fell ill.
He died in London and was buried in Lincoln Cathedral on November 24th , 1200. Two kings, 17 bishops, nobles and crowds of the common people came to the funeral of this much loved man.
Saint Hugh is often shown with a swan by his side. This is because at his palace at Stow Park he had a pet wild swan. It would follow him everywhere, looking for food in his clothes, ’ walking ’ upstairs in the house and even guarding him while he slept.
At the time of the Reformation he was the best known saint after Thomas Becket.
Sources used
wikipedia
Britannica Online Encyclopedia
The Church’s Year by Charles Alexander
Saint Malo or Saint Machutus was a sixth century saint.
He was the founder of Saint-Malo, a commune in Brittany, France. He was one of the seven founding saints of Brittany.
Malo was baptized as an adult by Brendan the Navigator and became his student… I have included a synopsis of his* Voyage of Saint Brendan the Abbot*.
he was the first bishop of Aleth - now modern Saint-servan in France.
There are two stories/legends about Saint Malo and seaweed. In one story he laid down on a heap of seaweed at low tide and fell asleep. Having searched on the beach he was found floating on the sea on a mass of seaweed.
The second story he was cut off by the sea and miraculously floated to safety on a bed of seaweed.
( Dates are not clear - wikipedia dates on sheet do not agree)
Sources used
wikipedia
The Church’s Year by Charles Alexander
Encyclopedia of Saints by Howard Loxton
Henry, on his 21st birthday, wrote in his diary
to live preaching and to die preaching; to live and die in the pulpit;to preach to perishing sinners till i drop down dead
The combination of the entrepreneurial Guinness spirit on his father’s side and the Cramers creative, magnetic qualities on his mother’s side was an irresistible combination.
1856 Henry entered New College in London under a tutor called Dr. Harris.
In 1857, whilst still a student he began to preach. He became an independent evangelist of the second Evangelical awakening. He spent 15 years travelling and preaching in Britain, Europe and North America.
In 1870 he married Fanny Fitzgerald. To be the wife of an itinerant evangelist’s wife was not an easy one. She travelled with him also became a well known speaker.
In 1872 because of their age, they were turned down for chance of being missionaries in China by their friend James Hudson Taylor. Undeterred they moved deliberately to East London, a poor and unsavory area. In 1873 they moved to Harley House in Bow. where they established the East London Institute for Home and Foreign Missions. ( closed in 1918)
In 1878 they founded the Livingstone Inland Mission. In 1889 they founded the Congo and Balolo Mission which became the Regions Beyond Missionary Union.
Also in 1878 Henry started to write the first of many Christian books. Which resulted in him speaking about biblical prophecy.
Fanny, ‘Mother of Harley’, and mother of their 6 children died in 1898.
He married Grace Hurditch in 1903. Together they travelled widely for 5 years before settling in Bath. In 1910, following a visit to the Congo, Henry died.
He was an Irish Protestant Christian preacher, evangelist and author. He was responsible for training and sending 100s of faith missionaries all over the globe.
He was the great evangelist of the Evangelical awakening
Four of his surviving children from his first marriage worked as missionaries overseas, For further reading read The Guinness Family in Ambassadors for Christ.
Sources
wikipedia
History of Missiology
Ambassadors for Christ ( publ. 1994)
Saint Brice or Brictius (Latin) of Tours was a favourite of Saint Martin of Tours.
According to legend Saint Brice was an orphan who was rescued by Saint Martin and raised in the monastery in Marmoutier. He became a monk and later archdeacon to Saint Martin.
Apparently he was disliked by the other monks because of his rudeness and worldly ways. Saint Martin when asked to send the trouble maker away replied
’ If Jesus could come to terms with Judas, then I can certainly come to terms with Brice.’
When Saint Martin died in 397 he became bishop; he became a new man and ruled the monastery well.
In the thirteen year of his episcopate a nun, a washer woman, had a child. The rumour was that Saint Brice was the father. He submitted to ritual of carrying hot coals in his cloak, showing the unburned cloak as proof of his innocence. They still did not believe him. It was only after he had travelled to Rome and been absolved by the Pope did he return.
Having spent 7 years in voluntary exile Saint Brice return to find that those who had replaced him had died. He then served with such humility that on his death, 7 years later, he was venerated as a saint. He was buried beside Saint Martin.
In some pictures he is shown either with glowing coals in his robe or holding a baby in his arms as a result of the rumour.
Sources used
wikipedia
The Church’s Year* by Charles Alexander
Saint Martin was born in Hungary to heathen parents. He became a Christian catechumen - person ready for baptism - when he was 10.
Aged 15 he joined the Roman army and was stationed at Amiens in Gaul (France)
According to his biographer -Sulpicius Severeus he petitioned the emperor, Julian the Apostate, to be released form the army.’ I am Christ’s soldier: I am not allowed to fight.’ Charged with cowardic he offered to stand in front of the battle line only with the sign of the cross. He was imprisoned but was soon discharged.
Legend has it that on a freezing night he cut his cloak in half to share it with a beggar. He dreamt that Jesus wore the other half. When he woke up his cloak was restored. Following the vision and apparent miracle he finished his religious studies and was baptised aged 18. ( After he died his cloak was carried into battle and Mass said in the tent where it was placed. Later replaced by a ‘forked’ blue banner)
Aged 20 Saint Martin left the army and joined Saint Hilary of Poitiers, together they founded the first monastery in France. He became a missionary in the provinces of Pannonia and Illyricum -now Balkan Peninsula. He went to Italy and to the island of Gallinaria. In 360 he returned to Poitiers. He then founded a community of hermits at Liguge - the monastery in Gaul.
Saint Martin became bishop of Tours in 371. He founded the Marmoutier monastery from which apostles spread Christianity throughout Gaul. He was an active missionary in Touraine and the country districts.
Saint Martin in 384/5 became involved in a conflict at the imperial court in Trier, France. It resulted eventually in bishop Priscillian of Spain being executed by the Roman authorities… His involvement caused him to fall into disfavour with Spanish bishops.
He died in 397 at Candes.
During his lifetime Saint Martin gained a reputation as a miracle worker and became one of the first non-martyrs to be publicly venerated as a saint. He was the patron saint of France, father of monasticism in Gaul and the first great leader of Western monasticism.
In England there are over 150 churches dedicated to him.
Sources used Britannica Online Encyclopedia
* The Church’s Year* by Charles Alexander
The two Peters were father (Sr) and son (Jr).
Peter Sr. was born in in Belarus. With his parents he immigrated to Chicago USA in 1913/4 where he worked in a machine shop. He was brought up in the Russian Orthodox Church.
He was born again in 1920 at a Moody Memorial Church. He graduated as valedictorian from the Moody Bible Institute in 1925. God ignited a fire in him to witness to anyone who would listen, especially Russians. He found many Russians across USA and Canada. His animated style and intensity earned him the nickname ’ Peter Dynamite ’
Peter Sr returns home to Russia to evangelize his own people and works in Latvia and Estonia as field secretary for the All Russian Evangelical Union. Peter Sr married Vera Demidovich in 1926. and Peter Jr was born in 1931.
January 1934, with 3 other men a committee is created to support his work. The Russian Gospel Association is founded in 1936 ( since 1949 called Slavic Gospel Association (SGA)).
SGA over the years has help provide missionary radio for the Russian people. Russian pastors said that missionary radio was instrumental in the conversion of many Russian families.
The story of the 2 Peters begin to overlap. Peter Jr . accepts Christ at home during grade school years. He graduates from Wheaton College in 1953and a M.Div at Northern Baptist Seminary in 1957. The SGA send him to numerous countries between 1955 and 1965. He becomes Assistant director (1966-3) and then president of SGA from 1975-1991.
Between 1976-1989 the Soviet Government rejects 10 visa requests from Peter Jr and his wife Anita. For 13 years they were denounced frequently in publications.
While they waited Peter Jr and his colleagues translated about 100 book titles. They were printed in the West and imported in limited quantities . He engaged in radio ministry. Russians received his pastoral training materials with enthusiasm.
Finally when glsnost (openness) and peresroika (restructuring) developed they received a visa February 1989. They moved to Moscow in January 1991.
By this time Peter Sr had died. He died in 1987 having dedicated his life to the ministry of evangelism despite the dangers and persecution under the Soviet regime. His biography is called ’ Twice Born Russian ’
In 1991 Peter Jr became president of the Peter Deyneka Russian Ministries 1991-2000). Peter Jr. died on 23rd December 2000. He had been diagnosed with lymphoma cancer earlier in the summer.
The sources I have used includes Peter Jr. Deyneka’s writing in *Ambassadors for Christ * (published in 1994)
The Christian faith, hidden, but vibrant for many years was allowed to flourish
All of my past was preparation for these past seventeen months
Peter Deyneka Jr.
Sources used Ambassadors for Christ
East-West Church Ministry report
Saint Etheldreda. or Audrey. was a princess. Her father was Anna, King of East Anglia.
Saint Etheldreda wanted her to become a nun but her father insisted she married Prince Tondbert in 652. The prince was persuaded to allow Saint Etheldeda to respect her vow of perpetual virginity. He died 3 years after they were married.
Saint Etheldreda was then asked to marry Ecgfrith of Northumbria, who was a young teenager,for political reasons, in 660. When Ecgfrith became king in 670 she told her wish to become a nun. One account relates that he initially agreed to letting her remain a virgin but then appealed to Wilfrid, bishop of York, to enforce his marital rights.
The final outcome was that Saint Etheldreda, with 2 nuns, fled to the Isle of Ely.
She arrived at a headland - Colbert’ Head, jutting into the sea. A high tide, which lasted for 7 days persuaded the king to give up the idea of compelling her to come back. He returned home realizing there was a power greater than his at work.
In 673 Saint Ethedreda built a large double monastery. Wilfred never lost sight of her - he made her abbess and gave the veil to her first nuns. She ruled the monastery for 7 years setting a great example of piety and abstinence and other monastic virtues. She lived a life of austerity - wearing only coarse garments - denied herself a hot bath. She had a bath at the four great festivals - using the same bath already served by the other nuns.
She died of quinsy - a throat infection on 23rd of June 679. She is the patron saint for throat sufferers…
wikipedia
The Church’s Year Charles Alexander
EBK: St. Etheldreda, Abbess of Ely
Steve Green is an American Christian singer noted for his tenor vocal range and flexible solo style. He is also noted fo rhis evangelistic mission to bring others to Jesus through his songs.
I have put the wikipedia information first because this is what the general public would want to known. His continued success as a singer and a list of the songs he has recorded.
I have put the information about his upbring second. This information can be found in Ambassadors for Christ. Here Don Wyrtzen tells us about Steve being brought up in a Christian household and him accepting Christ into his life when he was only 8 years of age. He goes on later to tell us that many years later, after he was married, he had to recommit himself to Christ after he had a heated disagreement with his brother. The disagreement resulting in him throwing himself upon the mercy, love and grace of Jesus. It resulted in him facing up to his hypocritical life and there is now a revival in his heart that burns brightly and consistently to this day.
Sources used
Ambassadors for Christ
wikipedia
Edward the Confessor was a king who later became recognized as a saint
He lived in the eleventh century . He died shortly before the Battle of Hasting between King Harold, his successor and William 1, William the conqueror.
There are differences of opinion as to whether he was a weak or a strong king. Confessor reflects his reputation as a saint who did not suffer martyrdom. Wikipedia uses the work ’ nickname ’ to reflect the traditional image of him as unworldly and pious. He did reign for 24 years
It is said because he was unable to fulfill a vow to go to Rome that he built a monastery. The monastery we call Westminster Abbey. He re-established the Abbey of Westminster on a site of a church built 400 years earlier. It was the first Norman Romanesque church in England. Building began in 1042 and consecrated on 28th December 1065. Edward unfortunately was too ill to attend the ceremony and died the following week - 5th January 1066.
Edward was buried at Westminster Abbey. His body was exhumed a number of times and was finally given a centerpiece, in a magnificent tomb, in the new thirteenth century ( present day )Abbey.
Edward can be seen on the famous Bayeux Tapestry.
Edward the Confessor was for many years the patron saint of England until Saint George, during the time of the Crusades, replaced him. HIs feast day is 13th October.
Westminster Abbey was finally completed in 1090 some 25 years after his death. In 1245, during the reign of Henry111, it was demolished and replaced by today’s present building.
With Florence Nightingale hospitals being created in a number of locations I have enclosed some information about the Florence Nightingale Museum. The museum is obviously closed at the present time but on their web site there is information about Florence.
Bud in his lifetime challenged 100s of 1000s students to give their lives to serving Christ in the ’ foreign field '.
Bud survived an accident with an axe before he was two. His mother prayed for his healing and dedicated her son to Jesus. In the dream that followed she saw children from all countries coming to her son’s side.
Jon Hinkson, his son, in ’ Ambassadors for Christ ’ , tells us a great deal about his father’s ministry, especially behind the Iron Curtain. from his birth to his final cycle ride to heaven. I have based this article on the headings he used. (See full text)
Memory Harvest. He was gifted with an incredible memory. His godly grandmother laid down the foundations of his Scripture memory. Years later Shirley Milligan, his future wife, wrote a list entitled * The man if I marry*. Bud memorized it and would remind her when he fulfilled a trait. Together they shared most of Bob’s adventures.
The University Ambassador Team Bud remembered in Luke 10 where Jesus sent out 70 in pairs - the result was the University Ambassador Team.
This team came to the UK. The watchword was Win, Build , Send and they were blessed with a lasting harvest. There were many foreign students. Bud spent a whole year in Africa. But they were drawn to Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.
*** Behind the Iron Curtain*** Bud with his wife and two children headed for Vienna with their passports inaccessible in the van. On the Romanian border a guard saw Shirley’s Bible. He got away with it by gaining the guards sympathy by saying his wife was a religious fanatic. Bud’s ministry involved the whole family. He began the Campus Crusade for Christ ministry in Poland in 1975.
20 years before the Berlin Wall fell Bud was all over the Soviet Block quietly organizing one of the greatest missionary endeavors of the twentieth century.
Opportunities and adversaries In 1990 while teaching the scriptures in a secluded Czechoslovakian hayloft he was invited to deliver 5 lectures on Christianity at the Soviet Academy of Science. In 1992 , on his last trip to Russia, he taught 400 students from across the former Soviet Union
Filled with joy and peace he literally radiated God’s love to those around Him
He died as a result of head injuries sustained in a cycling accident in Germany. Bud was 58.
The New Life Christian School in Moscow in 1992 was renamed Hinkson Christian Academy in memory of Bud.
Sources * Ambassadors for Christ * contribution from his son Jon
Mission Poland
History of Hinkson
Saint Dionysius, the Areopagite, is only mentioned once in the New Testament. Acts 17 v33/4 reads That ended Paul’s discussion with them, but some joined him and became believers. Among them were Dionysius, a member of the council, a woman called Darnaris and others with them.
Dionysius was called Areopagite because he was a member of the Areopagus or Upper Council of Athens.
He was one of the first Athenians to believe in Christ.
Tradition holds that when he was a boy and visiting Egypt he experienced. on the day Jesus was crucified, From noon until three the afternoon darkness came over all the land . The same darkness that happened in Jerusalem.
After meeting Saint Paul he was converted.and he became the first bishop of Athens. He suffered a martyr’s death by burning.
Christian historian Eusebuis of Caesarea, preserved the Dionysius’ story in his Ecclesiastical history.
Two saints have been given the name of Dionysius. I have concentrated on the Saint Paul converted.
wikipedia
The Church’s Year by Charles Alexander
George Frisk shortly after his arrival in Borneo commented 'I’ll fly the gospel here ’ watching two hornbills gliding along effortless after they had taken hours to travel, by canoe, only a few hundred yards from their campsite.
Born into a godly family in Binghamton , New York 1905 .
Aged 8 he attended a circus where he showed a lot of interest in 'Wild Man of Borneo '. He asked his mother if missionaries went there. She replied ’ No '. It planted a seed that he would be the one to take the gospel to them.
16 years later, 1929, he was in Borneo. He had pursued missions and medical studies in college. His first attempts to be accepted for Borneo failed but Christian Missionary Alliance (CMA) accepted his application.
His comment amount fly the gospel was said in 1932 after carrying boats around an unnavigable section of a Borneo river.
George corresponded with Dr. R. A. Jaffrey, the person who had first encouraged him. Jaffrey was now his field director and he was supportive.
George in 1935, on his furlough, obtained his pilot’s license and ‘soloed’.
In 1938 the board granted George’s proposal to buy an aircraft. The Beechcraft SE 17B was selected. Floats were installed . The plane was then disassembled, crated and shipped to Borneo. where it was reassembled.
Paul Robinson, a pilot, listened to George’s presentation before WW11. After the war he was deemed too old to fly but persuaded the Moody Bible Institute to begin a programme to train students to fly and care for airplanes.
James Truxton , another pilot,in 1943 heard George speak. He with George and two others formed Christian Airman’s Missionary Fellowship (CAMF) - now MAF.
Six mission aviation programmes were created within a short space of time (Read Missionary Aviation Fellowship paragraphs). George’s vision of 1932 was more than fulfilled.
In 2013* Arrivals and Departures* under the title * The Plane Truth* tells the story of George Fisk. In 2017, Geogette , his grand daughter, says thanks for keeping his story alive.
George’s vision of using aeroplanes to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ is very much alive.
Sources used
wikipedia
Ambassadors for Christ* contribution from John and Steve Wells
Mission Aviation fellowship
Saint Leonard of Noblac was a Frenchman born about 485. He is a Frankish saint closely associated with the town and abbey of Saint Leonard-de-Noblat, in Haute-Vienne, in Limousin region of France.
It is very difficult to separate fact from legend.
Traditional biography
He was a Frankish noble in the court of King Clovis 1, founder of the Merovingian dynasty. He was converted along with the king at Christmas 496, by Saint Remigius, Bishop of Reims. He was granted the right to liberate prisoners he thought worthy of it.
He did secure the release of prisoners -he is the patron saint for prisoners.
He would have prayed for them, converted some of them and tried to raise money for their ransoms.
Tradition suggests he became a monk , then became a hermit living in the forest of Limousin. As a hermit he then gained some friends, who recognizing his holiness, wanted to live with him - the result a monastery. One source suggests he became the abbot.
Legend ? -King Clovis 1 was his grandfather or godfather. (Sources differ)
Legend ?- he prayed for the queen , who was ill, before she gave birth to a son .
Legend ?- that during a losing battle the queen asked him to pray. He prayed and King Clovis 1 was victorious.
Legend? - as a way of saying thank you the king gave him royal lands at Noblac.
Legend? -prisoners who invoked (called ) his named saw their chains break off.
He died of natural causes around 559. There are churches all across Europe dedicated to his name. In England 177, In Italy almost 225 churches. Former prisoners used to hang their chains in churches dedicated to him.
There has to be truth in the legends.
Peter Paul Jonannes Beyerhaus was a German pastor, theologian, missionary scholar and academic teacher.
Peter was ordained as a pastor by the bishop of Berlin in1955. He served with the Berlin Mission society in Transvaal and Natal in South Africa from 1957-65.
He did not want to leave but his daughter Karolina became ill and realised it was time to move on.
From 1966-77 he was the professor of missionary theology and ecumenical theology at the university of Tubingen. He lectured around the world.
In 1872 he was elected president of the Theological Convention of Confessing Fellowships in Germany.
In 1988 he fell out with his faculty. The liberals in his faculty wanted to honour the Dalai Lama with the Lucas Prize for Peace. (Read Standing for truth)
In 1989 he became honorary rector of Kornal Graduate School for Mission.
Peter was a man who would speak uncompromisingly and yet be concerned for the individuals involved. A man with a mission to keep the church on course and growing healthily.
On the 5th October 2018 the Society of Peter Beyerhaus was founded in his name in South Korea.
He died on 18th January this year -2020 aged 90
Sources used * Ambassadors for Christ contribution from Elaine Rhoton
wikipedia
Kukimn Daily