Missionary Biography
In Beyond Prison Walls, Marian Bomm tells her story of internment in a World War II Japanese prison camp.
Ivor and Ruth Greenslade were great missionary pioneers because they love the Lord Jesus and know the excitement of spreading His love to a lost world. Read the exciting account of their work in Peru.
The amazing story of God’s blessing on ABWE is detailed in this condensed compilation of the Heritage and Harvest books, with an update to the year 2000.
Adoniram Judson and his wife, Ann, arrived in Moulmein, Burma, in July 1813. Adoniram had become a Baptist while studying the Bible en route, so the Judson’s arrival unwittingly started the Baptist missions movement.
For decades, missionary pilots have formed a vital link between missionaries in difficult-to-reach locations and the outside world. These pilots save lives by transporting the injured and critically ill to hospitals in the nick of time; they take the gospel to indigenous people groups that are virtually unreachable by other modes of transportation; and they deliver food, supplies, and mail so that the missionaries can stay at their posts.
Now in Its Sixth Printing!
Dr. Stephen Olford writes in his forward, “Interwoven is a missionary classic! When you pick it up, you will not put it down until you have finished reading every word.”
Dr. W. Glen Evans writes: “To know Millie Crouch and her missionary partner, Priscilla Bailey, is to know the amazing missionary explosion of our generation.
In Miracle Mountain, Jay Walsh, project host during the construction of ABWE’s International Headquarters and Training Center, explains how God directed the mission in securing its current location.
No Greater Joy is filled with moments of high drama and gripping emotion as Ruth Woodworth recounts her treks to remote Philippine islands with the gospel message, directs a Bible institute for Filipinos, and survives internment and near-starvation through World War II.
On Duty in Bangladesh tells the story of the chaos, confusion, agony, and international intrigue surrounding the bloody birth of the nation of Bangladesh.
One Candle recounts God’s amazing work through two people determined to share His light in the darkest corners of the world. After World War II, Dallas and Kay Washer became frontline soldiers in the great twentieth-century army of missionaries that left the United States to serve around the globe.
Marjory Barnett Miller was born in Hong Kong to Victor and Margaret Barnett, ABWE’s first missionaries to China. She lived all of her childhood in China, speaking two Chinese dialects fluently before she learned English.
The village along the Amazon river in Brazil where missionaries Paul and John Schlener and their families lived and worked was named for them: The Port of Two Brothers.
Ripe Mangoes presents mini-biographies of Bangladeshis who have stepped from Hinduism, Buddhism, and many other walks of life, into the light of Christ.
This book portrays the passions of a new nation emerging from a bruising war – and the compassion of a dedicated nurse who cared for the people in many beautiful ways.
When he was just 15 years old, Kurt Rose ran away from home in search of adventure, becoming a sailor to explore exotic lands.
“When China sneezes, Hong Kong gets a cold.” In the twentieth century, Communist persecution and war drove thousands of Chinese refugees to the British colony of Hong Kong.
The Great Commission is a “mighty tall order.” It is both a command for every believer and the grand…
World War II veteran, Paul Schlener, tells his story of living through one of the most terrifying typhoons in naval history. Read how it changed his life forever and lead him to a life of missions.