Samuel M. Zwemer (1867-1952) was a missionary, author, and scholar renowned as a global authority on Christian missions. As an early leader in the Student Volunteer Movement, pioneered the Arabian Mission in Iraq and Bahrain. Afterwards he was based out of Egypt for many years, where he published the Moslem World Quarterly and became a global leader in Christian missions to Muslims for many decades. Later in life, he was appointed a chair of History of Religion at Princeton Theological Seminary. His biography is in itself an account of the revival of interest in missions to Muslims in the 20th century.//J. Christy Wilson (1891-1973) was a missionary in Tabriz, Iran for 22 years and succeeded Zwemer as professor of missions at Princeton Theological Seminary, where he taught for 20 years. He also authored "The Christian Message to Islam."//All of Pioneer Library's books are sustainably sourced, ethically extracted, and organically grown. We do not print unvetted or unedited library scans of public domain works. This book was completely re-typeset from a primary source, and all citations and spelling were updated to reflect today's standards.
Zwemer’s was ‘a life in God’ from his writing, preaching/teaching, and his witness throughout North Africa and the Middle East. This work captures the heart behind a faithful and forerunning missionary among those who are followers of Islam. If you want to know more of this part of the world and the gospel work within, take up and read!
Dr. Samuel Zwemer cancels the notion that it's useless to confront another's person's religion. It should not be in a context of making one overbearing over the other,but with Truth. Jesus said He is the way,Truth,and life so let's reason with each other. That's what Zwemer did and focused on in his time in Arabia,reasoned with men of a different culture and belief system. It didn't take long before other Christians realized the importance of missions to the very end of the earth.
This book tells of a man whose vibrant faith in God changed modern missions. I much appreciated this book.
The writing style is very much like other books written in the 1950s that I've read. It is intricately detailed, which is good at some points and difficult to read at other points.