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قراءة كتاب How I Know God Answers Prayer The Personal Testimony of One Life-Time
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How I Know God Answers Prayer The Personal Testimony of One Life-Time
How I Know
God Answers Prayer
The Personal Testimony of One Life-Time
By
Rosalind Goforth
Missionary in China since 1888
"They shall abundantly utter the memory of thy
great goodness."—Psalm 145:7.
"Go . . . and tell them how great things the Lord
hath done for thee."—Mark 5:19.
HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
NEW YORK AND LONDON
Harper & Brothers
Printed in the United States of America
FOREWORD
The story is as follows: When in Canada on our first furloughs I was frequently amazed at the incredulity expressed when definite testimony was given to an answer to prayer. Sometimes this was shown by an expressive shrug of the shoulders, sometimes by a sudden silence or turning of the topic of conversation, and sometimes more openly by the query: "How do you know that it might not have happened so, anyway?"
Gradually the impression deepened: "If they will not believe one, two, or a dozen testimonies, will they believe the combined testimonies of one whole life?"
The more I thought of what it would mean to record the sacred incidents connected with answers to prayer the more I shrank from the publicity, and from undertaking the task. There were dozens of answers far too sacred for the public eye, which were known only to a few, others known only to God. But if the record were to carry weight with those who did not believe in the supernatural element in prayer, many personal and scarcely less sacred incidents must of necessity be made public.
Again and again I laid the matter aside as impossible. But I know now that the thing was of God. As months, even years, passed, the impelling sense that the record of answers to prayer must be written gave me no rest.
It was at the close of the 1908-10 furlough—during which, as a family, we had been blessed with many and, to our weak faith, wonderful answers to prayer—that my oldest son urged me to put down in some definite form the answers to prayer of my life, and extracted from me a solemn promise that I would do so.
But months passed after returning to China, and the record had not been touched. Then came a sudden and serious illness which threatened my life, when the doctor told me I must not delay in getting my affairs in order.
It was then that an overwhelming sense of regret took possession of me that I had not set down the prayer testimonies, and solemnly I covenanted with the Lord that if he would raise me up they should be written.
There was no more question of what others might think; the one thought was to obey. The Lord raised me up; and although he had to deal with me very sternly once more before I really set myself to the task, the testimonies that are given here were written at last—most of them in odd moments of time during strenuous missionary journeys among the heathen.
Thus it will be seen that these incidents of answered prayer are not given as being more wonderful, or more worthy of record, than multitudes the world over could testify to; but they are written and sent out simply and only because I had to write them or disobey God.
CONTENTS
Foreword | |
How these testimonies came to be written
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iii |
I |
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"Getting Things from God" | |
The simplicity of petition
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1 |
II |
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Early Lessons in the Life of Faith | |
Led by a bird. Toothache taken away. Reward of seeking first the Kingdom. Financial aid.Sunday-school scholars given. Guidance in time of crisis. A prayer preparation for China. A beautiful seal on the new life
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6 |
III |
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"Go Forward on Your Knees" | |
(1887-1894) | |
The key-note of pioneer years. Help in the language from the Home Base. Prayer-opened doors. Deliverance in time of peril. "Kept by the power of God." Prayer and medical work. Converts from the first. Wang Feng-ao, the proud Confucian scholar. Wang Fu-Lin, the opium fiend. Dr. Hunter Corbett's testimony. The result of obedience. From the gates of death. Lord Sandwich's testimony
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15 |
IV |
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A God-given Field (1894-1900) | |
A promise given. The promise fulfilled. Our great need. One need supplied—an evangelist. A second need supplied—a Bible-woman. Paying the price of petition. A touch of healing. A Chinaman's faith,—the locust story! A Christian woman's faith for her child. Our child died—a case of unanswered prayer. A God of deliverances
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28 |
V |
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Our Deliverance from the Boxers | |
(1900) | |
A clear answer to prayers in the home church. Led on through dangers and trials. Safely brought through
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