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Seeing the Invisible

Ordinary People of Extraordinary Faith

Faith Cook
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Seeing the Invisible

Ordinary People of Extraordinary Faith

Faith Cook

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When John Bunyan asked Elizabeth to marry him he was inviting her to share not only his life but also his sufferings. Young Elizabeth would care for her new husband's four children, and take the family through the dark period of persecution when John Bunyan was imprisoned.

The story of Elizabeth's strong faith and courage is recorded here, alongside the stories of nine other ordinary people of extraordinary faith.

Among them a young child known to us only as Jane, a man who was willing to volunteer to be a slave for the sake of the gospel and a woman who served in Spurgeon's church with such faithfulness that he called her his 'best deacon.'

It is no surprise that Derek Prime says, "My hope and prayer are that God may graciously use the inspiration of these ten lives… As we take a good look at the example of godly men and women, may their faithfulness instruct and inspire us."

Biographies include:

·      William Darney: ‘Scotch Will’, pedlar and preacher 

·      Harriet Newell: Where stormy seas cannot divide 

·      Ezekiel Rogers: God’s poor exile 

·      Jane: A child who believed 

·      Elizabeth Bunyan: Out of weakness made strong 

·      Robert Jermain Thomas: A single, steady aim

·      Lavinia Bartlett: Spurgeon’s ‘best deacon’ 

·      Leonard Dober: Volunteer slave 

·      Martha Nelson: The cause is God’s 

·      John Blackader: Resolute Covenanter 

  • Title

    Seeing the Invisible

  • Author(s)

    Faith Cook

  • ISBN

    9780852344071

  • Format

    Paperback

  • Publisher

    Evangelical Press

  • Audience

    Adults

  • Pages

    160

  • Published

    05/01/1998

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Faith Cook

Faith Cook

Faith Cook, daughter of Stanley and Norah Rowe, missionaries of the China Inland Mission (now OMF), was born in north-west China. After missionaries were evicted from the country in 1951, she returned to the UK and attended Clarendon School in North Wales before proceeding to teacher training college in Bromley, Kent. She married Paul Cook in 1961, and they served several evangelical churches in the Midlands and Yorkshire before his retirement. They have a daughter, four sons and ten grandchildren, and now live in Breaston, Derbyshire.

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