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HUDSON TAYLOR The man who believed God by Marshall Broomhall

This book should be required reading for any and all future missionaries. Broomhall does the Christian world a great service by detailing Hudson Taylor's successes as well as his trials. The most remarkable feature of this book is the faith of Hudson Taylor. In the midst of incredible adversity this man abandoned himself to Jesus and the promises of Scripture. He rested solely on the provision of God, letting no man know his need. Throughout the book, Taylor's adversities and God's deliverances are a source of encouragement and inspiration that will lift the spirits of any true believer to "cast all your cares on Him because He cares for you." This book is an excellent read about a life well-lived and a spiritual journey of great depth.

This book should be required reading for any and all future missionaries. Broomhall does the Christian world a great service by detailing Hudson Taylor's successes as well as his trials. The most remarkable feature of this book is the faith of Hudson Taylor. In the midst of incredible adversity this man abandoned himself to Jesus and the promises of Scripture. He rested solely on the provision of God, letting no man know his need. Throughout the book, Taylor's adversities and God's deliverances are a source of encouragement and inspiration that will lift the spirits of any true believer to "cast all your cares on Him because He cares for you."
This book is an excellent read about a life well-lived and a spiritual journey of great depth.

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I26<br />

THE MAN WHO BELIEVED GOD<br />

of his Master, and to indicate the spirit he sought to<br />

infuse in those <strong>who</strong> wished to follow him. That he was<br />

not asking what he did not practise himself all knew,<br />

and that added power to his words. His strength as a<br />

leader lay in his example, even more than in his precept.<br />

No trial was shirked, no sacrifice considered too great.<br />

He knew soul travail, depths of feeling, he knew something<br />

of the griefs and joys of the Christian worker, and<br />

the expenditure of soul and heart in his work. And his<br />

spirit was contagious, and multiplied itself. He could<br />

attach people both to himself and to his principles, and<br />

this was in no small measure because of his own large<br />

heart and his humble, hu<strong>man</strong> sympathies. <strong>The</strong> meek<br />

inherited.

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