John Paton (Men of Faith) / John Paton ; edited and abridged by Benjamin Unseth.
Series: Men of faith | Men of faithPublisher: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA : Bethany House Publishers, [1996]Copyright date: ©1996Description: 160 pages : 1 map ; 18 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 1556614950 (paperback)
- John Paton : frontier missionary to the South Pacific [Cover title]
- Wikipedia about John Paton.
- From Internet Archive: Paton, John (1889). John G. Paton, Missionary to the New Hebrides : an autobiography. First Part. New York: Carter. Edited by his brother Rev. Dr. James Paton
- From Internet Archive: Paton, John (1889). John G. Paton, Missionary to the New Hebrides : an autobiography. Second Part. New York: Carter. Edited by his brother Rev. Dr. James Paton
- From Internet Archive: Paton, John (1892). The story of John G. Paton: told for young folks, or, Thirty years among South Sea cannibals. New York: Carter.
Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Corinda | ANF | Corinda | 266.0092 Pat Joh 1996 c1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0196 |
Introduction -- First things first -- Welcome to Tanna -- After the honeymoon -- In the presence of my enemies - Blinding light, deepening shadows -- The final war -- Australia to Aniwa -- Beyond revenge -- The well -- Around the world and home again -- Epilogue.
When John Paton left Scotland to become a missionary to the South Pacific in the late 1800s, he dared an island's chief priests to prove their gods by placing a death curse on him. The failure of their curse brought support for his ministry from some, murderous ambushes from others. When Paton dug a well and provide "water from a rock," it was a clear miracle in the sight of the islanders. From that time forward people turned to the Lord.--Back cover.
In 1887 John Paton sat down and wrote the story of his life - from birth, in 1824, to 1862. Since those first 380 pages were so popular, he quickly wrote Part Two - another 380 pages, on the period of 1862-1885. A decade later he concluded his writing with Part Three, telling his story through 1898, another 100 pages. For this edition the original autobiography has been distilled to one-fifth of its original bulk. The language has been updated to remove the barriers of archaic vocabulary and grammar. Paton's New Hebrides islands are referred to under their modern name of Vanuatu.--Introduction, pages 9-10.
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