Christian Heroes Poster Contest
a project of Sedalia's Faith Baptist Church. Posters are due Friday, Oct. 22, 2010. Stay tuned for inspiration, ideas, and more...
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Short Bios
At http://www.av1611bible.com/saints.htm you can access short biographies of some great men and women of the past few centuries.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
William Tyndale, Bible Translater
Over 100 years after Wyclif worked on an English translation of the Scriptures, William Tyndale attempted the same feat. He gave his life for his conviction that the Bible should be in the language of the common "plow boy." The good news is that most of his work found its way eventually into our own King James version. You can see a little of his Bible to the left.
One might wonder how on earth the Catholic church would have had a problem with the Bible being translated into common languages. On the surface, the argument went that only Latin scholars were able to understand the Bible well enough to study it and that they had a special "grace" from God to understand it. The article at the above link goes deeper, though.
"...(T)he church realized that their power and control over the people, and even over the state, would be lost if certain doctrines were exposed as unbiblical—especially the priesthood and purgatory and penance....(which) boils down mainly to the way Tyndale translated five words. He translated presbuteros as elder instead of priest. He translated ekklesia as congregation instead of church. He translated metanoeo as repent instead of do penance. He translated exomologeo as acknowledge or admit instead of confess. And he translated agape as love rather than charity....(T)hose words in particular undercut the entire sacramental structure of the thousand year church throughout Europe, Asia and North Africa....”
I don't know about you, but I am thankful for the strong stand William Tyndale took. Because of him and others like him, we can now read our own Bibles in our own languages.
(from http://home.comcast.net/~pegbowman/BritishSaints/TyndaleWilliam.htm)
One might wonder how on earth the Catholic church would have had a problem with the Bible being translated into common languages. On the surface, the argument went that only Latin scholars were able to understand the Bible well enough to study it and that they had a special "grace" from God to understand it. The article at the above link goes deeper, though.
"...(T)he church realized that their power and control over the people, and even over the state, would be lost if certain doctrines were exposed as unbiblical—especially the priesthood and purgatory and penance....(which) boils down mainly to the way Tyndale translated five words. He translated presbuteros as elder instead of priest. He translated ekklesia as congregation instead of church. He translated metanoeo as repent instead of do penance. He translated exomologeo as acknowledge or admit instead of confess. And he translated agape as love rather than charity....(T)hose words in particular undercut the entire sacramental structure of the thousand year church throughout Europe, Asia and North Africa....”
I don't know about you, but I am thankful for the strong stand William Tyndale took. Because of him and others like him, we can now read our own Bibles in our own languages.
(from http://home.comcast.net/~pegbowman/BritishSaints/TyndaleWilliam.htm)
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Revival Preacher in the American Colonies
Here is an article describing the life of George Whitefield, who preached an estimated 18,000 sermons in both England and colonial America in the mid 1700s. And here is another interesting biography of Whitefield.
He was quoted as saying, "Works! Works! A man get to heaven by works! I would as soon as think of climbing to the moon on a rope of sand!"
An important part of the Great Awakening, this revival preacher was greatly influenced by the Bible commentary written by Matthew Henry, which is still one of the best you can get.
Friday, September 17, 2010
A Really Good Clip Art Site
For artwork on your poster, you can draw it yourself... Or you can use clip art. Here is a free educational site (from the state of Florida) with tons of good pictures. It can be searched easily, which is not the case with many clip art sites. I've found pics of George Whitefield, John Wesley, and many others, and I've just started searching. Happy Hunting!
To the left, you see a statue of John Wycliffe, who was the first one to translate the Bible into English, and is sometimes called "the Morning Star of the Reformation." And here is a site where you can read Wycliffe's English version!
To the left, you see a statue of John Wycliffe, who was the first one to translate the Bible into English, and is sometimes called "the Morning Star of the Reformation." And here is a site where you can read Wycliffe's English version!
Monday, September 13, 2010
Great Link for Art Ideas
The ArtSkills website has free software for generating posters along with a lot of other helpful information. What a fun way to get your creativity kick-started!
More Heroes from History - Some Distant, Some Quite Recent
Squanto - Native American who helped the Pilgrims and came to faith in Christ
Johnny Appleseed - Helped the early American settlers by growing apple trees.
Wellesley Bailey - Founder of the Leprosy Mission
Dietrich Bonhoeffer - German pastor who stood in opposition to Hitler, martyred.
David Brainerd - Among the first to teach North American Indians the gospel of Christ
John Bunyan - Wrote Pilgrims Progress
Jim Elliot - Martyred missionary to South American Indians, whose wife, Elizabeth, returned and lived among her husband's murderers.
John Calvin - A Christian Reformer
William Carey - A Missionary to India
Amy Carmichael - Missionary to India, helped girls get free of being exploited.
Thomas Cranmer - Archbishop to Henry VIII. Major impact on the reformation and today's church
Oliver Cromwell - A constitutional reformer who brought political stability after the civil war
Jonathon Edwards - Revival preacher
Desiderius Erasmus - First printed Greek version of the New Testament
John Foxe - wrote Foxe's Book or Martyrs
Elizabeth Fry - Prison visitor and social reformer
Billy Graham - The people's Evangelist 'Hour of Decision'
Patrick Hamilton - A Scottish martyr whose preaching influenced the Scottish and English church
Peter Marshall - Preacher who became Chaplain of the U.S. Senate in the 1940s. Husband of writer Catherine Marshall who wrote "Christie" and other books.
William Hunter - The boy martyr who refused to recant his faith.
John Huss - Martyred. He opposed the Roman church and preached the Gospel
Adoniram Judson - Missionary to Burma
Fanny Crosby - Blind hymn writer
John Knox - Reformation in Scotland
George Frederick Handel - Composer who wrote the Messiah
Eric Liddel - Athlete with principles 'Chariots of Fire'
David Livingstone - World-famous missionary from Scotland taking God's light to Africa
Martin Luther - The father of the Reformation
Sir Charles Middleton - First Lord of the Admiralty. Saved England at a time of peril
D.L. Moody - A great Bible teacher
George Mueller - Provided homes and education to over 120,000 children in England
John Newton - Slave-trader turned Christian, wrote "Amazing Grace"
Florence Nightingale - World-famous nurse
Nate Saint - Missionary and martyr
Jerome Savonarola - A pioneer of the Reformation
Mary Slessor - Dedicated Scottish missionary to Africa
C. H. Spurgeon - The Great Orator
Dr. Henry Morris - Scientist and writer who founded the Institute for Creation Research.
Billy Sunday - A baseball player turned preacher
Hudson Taylor - First missionary to take God's Word to inland China
Corrie Ten Boom - A heroic modern day saint and evangelist
Robert Jermain Thomas - Protestant missionary martyr who changed the nation of Korea
William Cameron Townsend - Set up the Wycliffe Bible Translators to take the Word to the world
Lillian Trasher - Missionary in Egypt
William Tyndale - Translated the New Testament into English. Martyred
Saint Patrick - Missionary to Ireland circa 400 AD.
John and Charles Wesley - Methodist founders, hymn writers
George Whitfield - A revival preacher
William Wilberforce - The Christian politician who brought the end to the slave trade
John Wycliffe - The first English translation of the Bible
Count Zinzendorf - A Christian reformer in Education
Ulrich Zwingli - Led the Reformation movement in the northern part of Switzerland
Robert Sheffy - Circuit riding preacher who held large camp meetings in the late 1800s
Col. George and Sarah Clarke - Founders of Pacific Garden Mission in Chicago.
Marcus and Narcissa Whitman - Missionaries to American Indians in the Northwest
Friday, September 10, 2010
A Few Ideas for Your Poster Subject
Here are some great Christians you might want to consider studying and illustrating...
Gladys Aylward - Missionary to China in the early 1900s. Her story has been fictionalized into the movie, "Inn of the Sixth Happiness." When she couldn't get backing from any missionary society, she worked as a maid until she saved enough money to make the trip by herself. Her story is one of adventure, heroism, and danger. She was able to help the government put an end to the practice of binding the feet of baby girls.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer - A German pastor who stood against Hitler, and was eventually executed for it.
John Bunyan - Reformation-era preacher who wrote Pilgrim's Progress. He spent a good deal of time in prison for his faith.
David Brainerd - One of the first missionaries to the American Indians in the early 1700s. He died of tuberculosis at the age of only 29, yet people are still inspired by his diary.
William Carey - An influential missionary to India around 1800.
Amy Carmichael - A missionary who ran children's homes in India for 55 years during the first half of the 1900s.
For a longer list with links to short biographies, please visit this link.
Gladys Aylward - Missionary to China in the early 1900s. Her story has been fictionalized into the movie, "Inn of the Sixth Happiness." When she couldn't get backing from any missionary society, she worked as a maid until she saved enough money to make the trip by herself. Her story is one of adventure, heroism, and danger. She was able to help the government put an end to the practice of binding the feet of baby girls.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer - A German pastor who stood against Hitler, and was eventually executed for it.
John Bunyan - Reformation-era preacher who wrote Pilgrim's Progress. He spent a good deal of time in prison for his faith.
David Brainerd - One of the first missionaries to the American Indians in the early 1700s. He died of tuberculosis at the age of only 29, yet people are still inspired by his diary.
William Carey - An influential missionary to India around 1800.
Amy Carmichael - A missionary who ran children's homes in India for 55 years during the first half of the 1900s.
For a longer list with links to short biographies, please visit this link.
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