Nicolaus zinzendorf biography of donald
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Hymns / Penalty :: Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf
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Christians You Should Know: Nicholas von Zinzendorf
“That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death.” – Philippians 3:10
A Snapshot of the Life of Nicholas L. von Zinzendorf:
Born: May 26, 1700, in Dresden, Germany
Died: May 9, 1760, in Herrnhut, GermanyFounder of the Moravian Church and of Bethlehem, PA in 1741 which became its American headquarters. Zinzendorf married Countess Erdmuth Dorothea von Reuss on September 7, 1722, and they had at least one daughter. He later married Anna Nitschmann in June, 1757. He left politics (Saxon civil service since 1721) in 1727, and devoted himself to his growing Herrnhut (The Lord’s Shelter) community on his estate which grew into the Moravian Brethren (originally Bohemian Brethren). It began, when in 1722, he permitted some members of the Moravian sect, fleeing from persecution in Austria, to settle on his estate near Dresden. In August, 1727, a powerful prayer meeting began that lasted for 100 years. A chance meeting of a West Indian Negro in Copenhagen in 1731 rekindled his interests in foreign missions. In 1732, Herrnhut had grown to over 600 and also sent out their first two missionaries. In 1734, he was ordain
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Homeschool conference vendor halls…
They are ubiquitous with moms rolling book-laden plastic crates on wheels behind them and children mobbing the booths with hands-on activities.
Oh, and let’s not forget those beautiful brown skyscraper stacks of Christian Heroes Then and Now books! What homeschooling mom hasn’t dreamed of walking out the door balancing that giant precarious stack in her arms (or rolling crate)?
Over the years, I’ve managed to collect a decent little stack of these books.
Certainly not skyscraper-sized, but a respectable little office building-size, maybe.
And every single one of these books that we’ve managed to fit in between all the other curriculum we bounce around in have been real winners for both me and my children.
Recently, we pulled out one of these books to read about a very obscure Christian leader whom I had never heard of named Count Nicolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf. I think that is one of the most refreshing aspects of these books. They don’t just cover the stories of all the famous missionaries and heroes of the faith we’ve all heard of, but they introduce us to new names that Christian history has forgotten.
How wonderful that these heroes of the faith can be remembered and put forth to our children as examples of lives well-lived