Unlisted Legion
Part of its Witness in the Karakoram and the Khyber
Out of stock
Weight | 0.19 kg |
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Dimensions | 18.1 × 12.1 × 1.3 cm |
ISBN | 9780851512457 |
Binding | Paperback |
Format | Book |
Original Pub Date | 1977 |
Banner Pub Date | May 1, 1977 |
Topic | Missionary Biography, Missions |
Page Count | 208 |
Book Description
Jock Purves has long been known for his popular classic, ‘Fair Sunshine‘ – the story of the 17th Century Scottish Covenanters – which he prepared while engaged in missionary service. With fifty years of such service behind him, the author, who lives in West Lothian, Scotland, has now produced another absorbing book, this time autobiographical in character and concerned with the most colourful and dramatic period of his life- the years 1926-30, spend in Lesser Thibet and on the Indian-Afghan Frontier.
While the Royal Scottish Geographical Society recognized his travels by making him a Fellow of the Society in 1931, the real spiritual story of those days as been left unrecorded until now. In part it is a tribute to the memory of colleagues- men and women of ‘the unlisted legion’ who lived, and sometimes died, in that remote and challenging mission field on ‘the roof of the world’; but it is chiefly the human story of the people of those regions, Baltis, Pathans and others, who are vividly depicted in a series of individual portraits. The author’s love for them all shines through these pages but he lingers longest on those who came to adorn the gospel of Christ.
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Description
An autobiography of Jock Purves, retelling the story of the missionary efforts of him and his friends in Lesser Thibet and on the Indian-Afghan Frontier. 208pp.
Description
An autobiography of Jock Purves, retelling the story of the missionary efforts of him and his friends in Lesser Thibet and on the Indian-Afghan Frontier. 208pp.
John Ross –
This brief account of an all too brief missionary career in Central Asia is real gem and true classic. It is great pity that at a time like this in world history, when conservative Islam is on the rise, that people cannot easily find and read of Jock Purves’ faithful, courageous and compassionate witness, and the triumph of the Gospel in lives where the “haunts of violence fill the dark places of the land”. It was my privilege to have known Jock Purves personally and to have been inspired and enthused by his confidence that the Gospel would yet triumph in Dar al-Islam (the House of Islam) in the way that we are beginning to see in our own troubled day, as God shakes the nations.