登入選單
返回Google圖書搜尋
Lessons of Infinite Advantage
其他書名
William Taylor's California Experiences. With Isabelle Anne Kimberlin Taylor's Travel Diary, 1866-67, Written During a Voyage with Her Family en Route from the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa, to London and Subsequent Travels Throughout Europe
出版Scarecrow Press, 2010
主題Biography & Autobiography / GeneralBiography & Autobiography / ReligiousReligion / Christian Living / GeneralReligion / Christianity / HistoryReligion / Christian Ministry / EvangelismReligion / Christianity / MethodistReligion / Christian Ministry / Missions
ISBN08108605979780810860599
URLhttp://books.google.com.hk/books?id=tj4sAQAAMAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋In this book, William Taylor tells in his own words the story of a foundational episode in his life. Following his trial ministry as a Methodist circuit rider in his home state of Virginia and his service of pastorates in the historic North Baltimore Conference, William Taylor (1821-1902) was commissioned as a missionary to California at the beginning of the Gold Rush Era. His subsequent "seven years of street preaching in San Francisco" set the stage for a half-century missionary career during which Taylor championed self-supporting missions to every populated continent, funded by the publication of his widely-read books.



Despite his prolific writing, none of Taylor's publications reveal the personal dimensions of his struggles or the day-by-day development of his missionary perspective. This early chapter in Taylor's career emerges for the first time with the publication of his journal, privately held by family members for over a century. The substantial journal chronicles five of Taylor's seven enterprising years (1849-1856) in San Francisco, Sacramento, San Jose, and the surrounding area, while offering a rich, first-person account of contemporary events written in Taylor's fine, narrative style. With this journal, readers may trace the genesis of Taylor's approach to self-supporting missions, including the development of his thinking on fund raising and his skepticism toward the possibility of a Christian use of money. A scholarly introduction, footnotes, and appendixes, together with several images, set Taylor's California experiences in historical context, while clarifying and explaining the journal's rhetoric, holiness doctrine, missionary strategies, and oblique references.