Author: | Mrs. Howard Taylor | ISBN: | 9781937428556 |
Publisher: | Kingsley Press | Publication: | August 14, 2015 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Mrs. Howard Taylor |
ISBN: | 9781937428556 |
Publisher: | Kingsley Press |
Publication: | August 14, 2015 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
A proud Confucian scholar with a deep distrust of all foreigners (including Christian missionaries) and hopelessly addicted to opium is confronted by the living Christ. He is instantly delivered, as well as completely and permanently transformed. Filled with the power and love of God, he is compelled to bring the message of deliverance to his fellow countrymen. Through prayer and fasting he begins to see miracles happen. People are healed and demons are cast out. He sets up a refuge for recovering opium addicts and God gives him a recipe for a special medicine that helps in the cure. More opium refuges are started in various places, all under his direction, and all eventually become gospel centers from which the good news of salvation radiates. This is the story of Pastor Hsi. In his foreword to this outstanding biography, Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones says, “I regard it as a classic and one of the really great Christian biographies.... To read it is to be searched and humbled ... but at the same time it is stimulating, and exhilarating, and a real tonic to one’s faith. In all this of course it approximates to the Bible itself. “The one word which describes the whole atmosphere and character of the book is the word apostolic.... One is constantly reminded of the book of the Acts of the Apostles....We are reading of something that is a direct continuation of what happened in the early days of the Christian church. It thrills with power....” Of Hsi himself Dr. Lloyd-Jones writes: “The outstanding characteristic was his spirituality. He was truly a man of God in the real sense of the word. His simple, childlike faith which yet was strong and unshakable was astonishing. He took the New Testament as it was and put it into practice without any hesitations or reservations. “Pastor Hsi’s ultimate interest was not in the cultivation of his own holiness, not in faith healing, or the exorcising of devils, or any other of the wonderful phenomena of the Christian life: it was in his Lord.... He desired to know him better and to serve him more truly. “We thank God for the memory of Pastor Hsi, and we thank God for Mrs. Howard Taylor, who has recorded the facts of the Pastor’s life so faithfully and so beautifully.”
A proud Confucian scholar with a deep distrust of all foreigners (including Christian missionaries) and hopelessly addicted to opium is confronted by the living Christ. He is instantly delivered, as well as completely and permanently transformed. Filled with the power and love of God, he is compelled to bring the message of deliverance to his fellow countrymen. Through prayer and fasting he begins to see miracles happen. People are healed and demons are cast out. He sets up a refuge for recovering opium addicts and God gives him a recipe for a special medicine that helps in the cure. More opium refuges are started in various places, all under his direction, and all eventually become gospel centers from which the good news of salvation radiates. This is the story of Pastor Hsi. In his foreword to this outstanding biography, Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones says, “I regard it as a classic and one of the really great Christian biographies.... To read it is to be searched and humbled ... but at the same time it is stimulating, and exhilarating, and a real tonic to one’s faith. In all this of course it approximates to the Bible itself. “The one word which describes the whole atmosphere and character of the book is the word apostolic.... One is constantly reminded of the book of the Acts of the Apostles....We are reading of something that is a direct continuation of what happened in the early days of the Christian church. It thrills with power....” Of Hsi himself Dr. Lloyd-Jones writes: “The outstanding characteristic was his spirituality. He was truly a man of God in the real sense of the word. His simple, childlike faith which yet was strong and unshakable was astonishing. He took the New Testament as it was and put it into practice without any hesitations or reservations. “Pastor Hsi’s ultimate interest was not in the cultivation of his own holiness, not in faith healing, or the exorcising of devils, or any other of the wonderful phenomena of the Christian life: it was in his Lord.... He desired to know him better and to serve him more truly. “We thank God for the memory of Pastor Hsi, and we thank God for Mrs. Howard Taylor, who has recorded the facts of the Pastor’s life so faithfully and so beautifully.”