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.
Ezekiel Handinawangu Guti was born on the 5th of May 1923 in Ngaone, Chipinge, Manicaland Province, Rhodesia. He is a gifted evangelist and has distinguished himself as a leading personality in the Pentecostal World.
His academic credentials include a BA, Ma, DD, D.MIn and Ph.D in Religion. Plus BA in Christian education and a Doctorate from Northgate Graduate school and Zoe College.
His ministry began on the 12th may 1960 under a gum tree in Bindura, Zimbabwe.
He founded the Zimbabwe Assemblies of God Africa (ZAOGA) Christian church in 1959 when the Apostolic Faith Mission broke away from the South African Pentecostal church. The church is now established in over 143 nations, with over 2,000 in Southern Africa.
ZAOGA is also known internationally as Forward in Faith Ministeries International. Its headquarters is to be found in Waterfalls, Harara Zimbabwe
Ezekiel initiated the building of Zimbabwe Ezekiel college and the Mbuya Dorcas Hospital. He oversees 5,000 pastors and evangelists world wide.
Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II (1935-2009) better known as Reverend Ike was an American minister and evangelist based in New York .
His ministry reached its peak in the mid 1970s when his weekly radio sermons were carried by 100s of stations across the USA…
He was famous for his ‘Blessing Plan’- radio listeners sent him money and in return he blessed them.
He bought in 1969 for more than $500,000 the Loew’s 175th Street Theatre movie palace. It was known locally as Reverend Ike’s Prayer Tower. He had it fully restored and decorated luxuriously. In 2016 it was designated as a landmark by the New York City Landmark Commission.
His preaching was considered a form of new-age theology. He diverged from traditional Christian theology and taught what he calledScience of Living**.
Graeme Goldsworthy (born 1934) is an Australian evangelical theologian specialising in the O.T and Biblical theology.
Graeme has been influential across the world but especially in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney where his work has been crucial for shaping how Sydney Australians think about and preach from the Bible.
His most significant work is a trilogy Gospel and Kingdom, Gospel and Wisdom,and The Gospel in Revelation (See ‘Works’ for full list)
Bro. Daniel S. Razon (born 1967) acts as the Assistant Overall Servant of the Members Church of God International (MCGI) (1997 to present). He is also a broadcast journalist and prominent television and radio personality.
He is fondly known as ‘Kuya Daniel’ and ‘.Public Service’ for the works and iinnovations he has pioneered that are centred on helping the public .
He was born in Bulacan, Philippines. He once aspired to become a doctor but took up Mass Communications in college as advised by Bro. Eli - who took to preaching The Old Path on the radio and television. The Old Path is recognized as the longest religious programme in the Philippines.
He assists Bro. Eli in leading the activities and propagation endeavours of the church as well as to attend to the overall spiritual, physical and mental welfare of the brethren.
He has pioneered many oF MCGI’s existing organizations and ministries.
He co-founded Bible Readers Society International.
He spearheaded Worldwide Bible Expositions.
Douglas Coe (1928-2017) was an American ordained ruling elder and lay minister in the Presbyterian Church USA. He was the associate director of The Fellowship (also known as family of friends in Christ, the Prayer Breakfast groups)
He was reluctant to speak in public and routinely denied requests for interviews and speeches to large audiences.
He met and worked for Abraham Vereide, a Norwegian methodist evangelist and founder of International Christian Leadership (ICI). He was fascinated by his visionary communication of a leadership led by God, empowered by his Spirit.
and became his assistant director.
Douglas was mentored by the young Billy Graham.
The Fellowship was a behind the scenes player at the Camp David Accords in 1978.
In March 2009 he was a featured speaker at the Idaho State Prayer Breakfast.
The extent of Douglas’s influence in American politics is a subject of debate.
In 2005 Douglas was named as one of the 25 most influential evangelicals in the USA by Time magazine.
Douglas died, aged 88, in Annapolis, Maryland on 21st February 2017 from complications of heart attack.
Daniel Chad is a British evangelist from London, UK. He was born in Bedford.
Before he became a Christian he was an amateur boxer who lived a life of addiction, violence and negativity and was on course for an 8 year prison sentence. It was through this desperation that Daniel was told about Jesus.
The love of God broke into his life and this led to a powerful conversion. Not long after his salvation he began to pray and heal people on the streets. People surrendered their lives to Jesus in shopping centres, churches and in hospitals.
He graduated from the Reinhard Bonke School of Evangelism and was catapulted into the ministry at the age of 21.
He has preached the Gospel of Jesus Christ iN the UK, Poland, Pakistan, Austria, Abu Dhabi, Germany and many more.
He has appeared on TV - Revelation TV and the God TV.
He is well known due to his evangelism and healing ministry videos.
Bayless Conley is an American gospel pastor and television personality who hosts Answers With Bayless Conleyon T.V…
He says he found God 35 years ago through a 12 year old Christian boy.
The Answers programme can be heard weekly on CNBC in Europe, North Africa, in the Middle East. in Mexico on Genesis T.V.and on other local channels.
He has also founded Cottonwood Church
In January 2014 he was hospitalized after a boating accident but has since recovered and returned to ministry.
Ethiopians around the world celebrate the baptism of Jesus with the feast of Timkat - celebrations are spread over 3 Days. it involves processions, singing and dancing.
On the 19th/20th (leap year) January is the most important day when the blessing of water and reaffirming of baptism vows take place.
Gary R. Hall was the 10th dean of Washington National Cathedral (2012-2015)
He was born in Los Angeles. He holds an A.B. from UC-Berkeley and a Ph.D from UCLA, plus a M. Div from episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge.
He has been an ordained minister for more than 35 years. He served several parishes in the USA . The congregations he served included All Saints Pasadena where he was senior clergy associate for education for 11 years. He taught Anglican theology and Polity at Berkeley Divinity School at Yale and the Episcopal Theological School at Claremont. He was both dean and president at Seabury-Western Theological Seminary in Evanston (2005-10).
Before he became dean at Washington National Cathedral he was the rector of Christ Church Cranbrook.
When he arrived he was told $50 milion was needed for quake damage and long term financial stability. He was known as a fix-up man. He raised the cathedral’s profile with his outspoken and steady public comments on things like race, transgender rights and gun control. He said later the place needed to raise $50 million, a decade, over the next 30 years to be sustainable.
He currently serves as the National Cathedral’s chief ecclesiastical leader and executive officer, working closely with the bishop of Washington and governing bodies to shape and support ministries in the city of Washington,the nation and the world.
Theodore Epp (1907-1985) was an American Christian clergyman, writer and a radio evangelist. He was the founding director and speaker of the Back to the Bible broadcasts between 1939-1985 (46 years) -when he retired. He was heard worldwide on 800 stations in 8 languages.
He was born in Oraibi, Arizona - the son of Russian Mennonite immigrants who were missionaries to the Hopi Indians. he attended Hesston College and the Bible Institute of Los Angles (now Biola University). In 1932 received a ThM form Southwestern Theological Seminary.
Back to the Bible also had a choir and a weekly youth programme featuring a youth choir and serialized adventures with a Christian theme.
The programme remains headquartered in Lincoln, Nebraska.
He wrote a total of 138 books.
Theodore carried on broadcasting throughout his life… He died, aged 78, on 13th October 1985 ,a very shortly after he had retired.
Roland Allen was an English missionary to China sent by the the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (SPG.
He was ordained a deacon in 1892 and priest the next year. He spent two periods in China , 1895-1990 ( forced to flee because of the Boxer Rebellion. He returned in 1902 but forced to return home due to illness
He became an advocate for churches to establish from the beginning a self-supporting/propagating/governing church.After visiting India in 1910 he published Missionary Methods in 1912- one of 10 books he wrote (see Works).
His views became increasingly influential.
He spent the last years of his life in Kenya. He died in Nairobi.
James was an American Roman Catholic priest who became a missionary in China.
In 1915 he became the second priest ordained in the new Maryknoll order.
In 1918,with three others, he was sent on his first mission to China.
His early years were chaotic- being captured by bandits and caught in local conflicts.
In 1927 he was consecrated Maryknoll’s first bishop.In 1936 he left China to become head of Maryknoll. During his 10 year term he oversaw Maryknoll’s first missions to Latin America and Africa
In 1948, following the Holy See’s special request, he returned to China to coordinate mission activities in China. The Communist party seized power in 1949. He expected to be arrested but that did not happen until 1958. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison- 12 spent in isolation. He was released in 1970.
His release was an important at gesture leading to the thawing of relations with President Nixion’s visit to China in 1972
James returned to the USA,. He did aged 91 in Maryknoll, New York from a heart ailment.
Joseph was a British protestant missionary who spent 57 years in China, 30 in Beijing. He specialised in Chinese religions, especially Buddhism… He was a linguist, translator and philologist. He penned many books about the Chinese language (See ‘Works’).
He graduated in1843 from the University of London and ordained in 1847.
In 1848 the London Missionary Society (LMS) sent him to China. He edited the Chinese and Foreign Concord Almanach from 1852-58. He also collaborated with others to translate many Western scientific works and the Bible.
He was also involved with direct evangelism travelling with Hudson Taylor on his first canal travels in China.
In 1872 he collaborate with William A.P. Martin to publish Peking Magazine- 36 issues terminated in 1875.
In 1880 resigned form LMS to become a translator for the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs. He became the Customs head and translated a series called 16 Primers for Western Knowledge covering many subjects.
In 1903 he survived typhoid and was still writing at the age of 81. He died in Shanghai on Easter Sunday 1905.
He married three times , his first wife , Jane Rowbotham Stobbs, died in 1863 aged just 22.
James, with co-founder Rev. Thomas Frederick Price, founded Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers (the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America - CFMSA in 1911.
( See separate sheet About Maryknoll - The Maryknoll Magazine)
James attended Boston College High School where his skills in debating and journalism were first recognised. He transferred to Harvard College as a ‘special student’. He completed his studies at St. John’s Seminary in Brighton, Boston.
In 1992 he was ordained.
In 1903 he was appointed Diocesan Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith and in 1907 he founded The Field Afar magazine.
He served as Superior General of the Maryknoll Fathers Brothers from 1911 until his death in 1936. During that time he made trips across the USA , Rome and other places throughout the world.
In 1933 he was named to the episcopacy as Titular, Bishop of Seine.
His teaching, as a priest, gave students strong encouragement to follow their dreams in life,
John was a Scottish Christian missionary, orientalist and educator in the Bombay presidency, British India.
In 1828 he married Margaret Bayne and together they went as missionaries of the Scottish Missionary Society (SMS) to Bombay.
He was more intelligent than his siblings- learning to walk and talk at an early age. In the playground he was regarded as the ‘priest’ because he often preached to his classmates!l
1819-1827 he attended the University of Edinburgh studying linguistics (8 languages), philosophy and theology.
His first experience of teaching was as a guide and tutor to the three boys of Colonel Rose Cormack as they travelled through the Netherlands.
In Bombay the couple studied Marathi at Harnai. John established the Ambroli Church, a school for the young and a college (1832-6).
In 1829 Margaret established schools for girls. In 1832 she established a boarding school for females - now called St. Columbia High School.
They opened schools in Marathi and Hebrew for the native Jewish community of boys and girls. They translated the Old Testament for their benefit.
John was an author of many books (see Writings) and a started a periodical The Oriental Christian Spectator which ran from 1830-1862.
He was an archaeologist and passionate advocate for the preservation of Indian historical monuments becoming the Honorary President of the Asiatic Society in Bombay. In 1948 he was elected the first president of the Bombay Cave Temple Commission
In 1857 he helped establish Bombay University and became Vice-chancellor in 1869.
Mark is a missionary, evangelist, ordained minister of the International Ministerial Fellowship and the House of God.
He originally wanted to pursue a career in politics and went to the University of Maryland to earn a degree in public relations.
Upon graduation he began a career in Christian ministry and attended the Candler School of Theology at Emory University- this followed a supernatural experience in his youth -, a mandate from God calling him to be a preacher, and becoming a born again Christian.His wife Alison had a similar mandate for Mark.
Mark became a pastor at Oak Grove Methodist Church in Woodstock, Georgia.
December 1975 he was baptized in the Holy Spirit and experienced speaking in tongues at Atlanta, Georgia. This was a turning point in his life. He began preaching at revivals and conferences.
His first mission was to Mexico in 1977. He began his missions in earnest in 1979 when he went to Ghana. This was followed by missions to Nigeria, India, Benin, Colombia , Peru, Thailand, Mexico and many other countries.
He founded Trinity Foundations - now called Global Servants; and House of Grace (1988).
In 1987 he became an associate pastor at Mount Paran Church of God in Atlanta. In 1990 he took over a leaderless Calvary Assembly of God in Orlando and transformed it over the next 5 years.
In 1999 he became the new president of struggling South Eastern University of God in Lakeland, Florida. Over the next 10 years it became a full university with a tripling of its enrollment (Read president of Southeastern University).
In 2009 he became president of Oral Roberts University. He helped the enrollment numbers to increase form just over 3,000 to 6,500. In 2011 he announced he would leave ORU within two years- He would then be 64 years of age.
He has remained active . He is the founder and director of the Institute on Christian Leadership, a one year educational programme for ministers and business leaders. He written 17 books (See Published works).
Brief information about ORU included
Source used
Wikipedia
Richard Allen was a minister, writer and one of USA’s most active and influential black leaders. He taught himself to read and write. He founded the African Methodist Episcopal church (AME) - the first Black denomination in the USA. He opened the first AME church in Philadelphia in 1794 and in 1816 he was elected their first bishop.
He was born into slavery. His family were sold to Stokley Sturgis who had a plantation. Having financial problems Sturgis later sold his mother and two younger siblings,keeping him and his older brother and sister. The three attended the local Methodist Society.
The Revd. Freeborn Garrettson came to preach in Delaware in 1775.He preached at Sturgis’s plantation and convinced him that slavery was wrong, This resulted in him giving Richard the chance to buy his freedom.
Aged 17 he joined the Methodists Society and began to evangelize which angered the slave owners
. In 1780 he bought his freedom having done extra work for Sturgis. He changed his name from Negro Allen to Richard Allen.
With his future Flora they establish a church (1787-1799). They married in 1790.
In 1800 he met Sarah Bass who became his second wife after Flora, died in 1801 after a long illness.
They moved to Philadelphia, married and had 6 children. Sarah was highly active and became in the AME Church the* Founding Mother.*
December 1784 he went to the Christmas Conference of the Episcopal Church in North America. Along with harry Hosier they were the only 2 black attendees.
In 1786 he became a preacher at St. George’s Methodist Episcopal church but was restricted to the early morning services. Along with Absalom Jones he resented the white leaders segregation of blacks for worship and prayer. They decided to leave St. George’s to create an independent, self-reliant worship for African Americans.
1787 Allen and Jones led the Black members out. They formed the Free African Society (F.A.S.). ( White ministers had to consecrate the bread and wine.)
In 1793, during the yellow fever epidemic, Allen and Jones, helped to organize free blacks as essential workers. Allen caught yellow fever and nearly died.
1794 he founded the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) and opened his first church.
1799 ordained as first Black Methodist minister in recognition of.his leadership and preaching (The Blacks still had to negotiate with the white leadership).
1816 he proposed the uniting of the 5 African-American Congregations. The first fully independent Black denomination was created -the African Methodist Episcopal Church (A.M.E,). Richard was elected as their first bishop.
From 1797 until his death in 1831 Richard and Sarah operated a station in the City of Brotherly Love on the Underground Railroad for fugitive slaves.
Richard died in 1831 having firmly established a separate Black Methodist denomination.
The A.M.E. is the oldest and largest formal institution in Black America.
Source
Wikipedia
Antoine was a French philosopher, mathematician and a leading theologian of the Jansenist movement ( See notes). He studied law and theology at Sorbonne. In 1641 he was ordained as a priest and deeply associated himself with the Jansenist movement at the convent at Port-Royal.
His book De la frequente communion (1641) caused a storm - it attracted controversy by being against frequent communion. For 20 years he was forced to withdraw from public life and the faculty at the Sorbonne.
He spent a lot of his time writing. He died, aged 82, in Brussels. His complete works -37 volumes in 42 parts was published between 1775-81. Boilrau wrote a famous epitaph The most learned man who ever wrote.
Antoine was also regarded as being one of the most important mathematicians of his time
His sister Marie Angelique Arnauld became abbess at Port-Royal.( See note)
Source
Wikipedia
Michael, born a Jew, became the first Anglican bishop in Jerusalem.
He was born into a Jewish family in Prussia and emigrated to England in about 1820.
His education in the Talmud began when he was a child. From 16-20 he was a teacher in the community teaching the Talmud and the German language.
In Norwich he became a rabbi. While there he came into contact with William Marsh a stalwart of the London Society for Promoting Christianity Among the Jews.- (now known as Church’s Ministry Among Jewish People (CMJ))
He attempted to escape the Christian influence by moving to Plymouth to teach.
In 1825 he converted to Christianity.
In 1827 he moved with his wife, Deborah, to Dublin. In the same year he was ordained into the Anglican church. From 1827-30 he worked for CMJ in Danzig and from 1827-41 in London.
In 1841 a unique agreement was reached between the British and Prussian governments - the establishment of a Protestant Bishopric in Jerusalem. Michael - the Jewish born Christian -was appointed bishop in 1842. His position was always controversial - the Jews called him an apostate.
He died just 3 years later but by that time he had set up a School of Industry, an Enquirers house, a Hebrew College and the first Hospital in Palestine.
Note
The Christ Church - a simple Gothic building- was completed in 1849,
4 years after Michael’s unexpected death. Outside it differs very little from many Anglican churches but inside the building has more similarity to a synagogue,
Source
Wikipedia
The Act of Uniformity prescribed the form of public prayers, administration of sacraments and other rites of the Established Church of England according to the 1662 Book of Common Prayer.
The Great Ejection meant ministers, who refused to follow the act, were forced out of their position. 2000+ Puritan ministers were ejected out of the C OF E and were now called nonconformists.
The Act of Uniformity is one of 4 crucial pieces of legislation known as the Clarendon Code.
Source
Wikipedia