Riveting, powerful, disturbing, even overwhelming stories of the grace of God, and of costly love for Christ.<br /><b>Lindsay Brown</b>, <i>Former General Secretary, IFES and former International Director, Lausanne Movement. </i><br /><i><br /></i><br />These are stories the world needs to hear, and Christians need to know. Don Cormack knew and loved and served so many of these brothers and sisters who loved Jesus more than life itself. With depth and compassion he brings us their voices first-hand, tracing the beautiful fruit borne out of the killing fields.<br /><b>Mark Ellis</b>, <i>CEO Keswick Ministries</i><br /><i><br /></i><br />There is a kind of suffering so heinous, it is beyond telling. Yet when Christ's redemptive grace floods the scene, that same suffering takes on an exalted glow of glory. It's what I experienced in reading these powerful stories. Be blessed as you read them, letting them whet your appetite for the larger classic work from which they are drawn.<br /><b>Joni Eareckson Tada,</b> <i>Joni and Friends International Disability Center</i><br /><i><br /></i><br />Convicting, inspiring and sobering. These stories pierced my soul. Let your heart, spirit and mind be moved as you read of those who did not count the cost of what it means to follow Jesus.<br /><b>Sarah Breuel,</b> <i>Director of Revive, Europe; Member, Lausanne Movement Board</i><br /><i><br /></i><br /><i><br /></i>
Map
Foreword by Julia Cameron
PART 1: SETTING THE SCENE
The flight from Phnom Penh
The fall of Phnom Penh
PART TWO: TEN STORIES
1. Van Rean's story
2. Chen's story 'How beautiful are the feet'
3. Events on the third anniversary
4. Pastor Reach Yeah
5. Haim and his family face their execution
6. Christmas!
7. Pastor Hom, his flock, and his personal grief
8. A boy whose brother is dying
9. A Khmer Rouge soldier finds forgiveness
10. A mother's love
Afterword
Timeline
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Don Cormack served as a missionary with OMF International in Malaysia, Taiwan, Cambodia, Thailand and Singapore from 1972-1996.After being forced to flee from Cambodia in 1975, he worked in Cambodian refugee camps along the Thai border. He later taught at at Discipleship Training Centre in Singapore, where he also ministered to heroin addicts, before returning to Cambodia in 1992, following the signing of the Paris Peace Accords. He was ordained by the Bishop of Singapore to begin the Church of Christ our Peace in Phnom Penh.
Don married Margaret Lockhart at Chefoo School in. 1979. They have three adult daughters. After returning to the UK he completed his award-winning book Killing Fields, Living Fields, now in its eighth edition, which chronicles the Cambodian church from its beginnings in the 1920s to the present day.