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Missy’s Babies begins when a very skinny and frightened cat appears in the neighborhood. The cat hides under the bushes and runs from people when they get too close. After befriending the cat and convincing it to come into the house, JoAnn Hill determines that “it” is a girl and decides to call her Missy. JoAnn tries in vain to find her owner, but no one claims her. Gradually, she becomes part of the family. One day, they notice that Missy is gaining weight. After a visit to the vet, they realize that she is pregnant. Although the family was reluctant to take in one cat, they cannot turn her away when she is expecting a litter of kittens. The birth of five kittens provides many exciting adventures for JoAnn and her husband—and Missy too! As the babies get bigger, JoAnn notices that one of the babies is as small as a mouse, and the vet suggests that it may not live. But Dinky, newly named because of her size, is determined to survive. Missy’s Babies is the heartwarming story of what happens when you open your heart to a situation and discover that there is a place for every living creature—sometimes in our own hearts and homes!
Doctors, nurses, teachers, and evangelists, the men and women of the Amoy Mission sowed the seeds of vibrant Christian community in China's Fujian Province. This book tells the stories of those remarkable missionaries whose legacy endures to this day.
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Details the life of Viktor Frankl, a Holocaust survivor and the author of "Man's Search for Meaning, " who, after losing his family, used his work to overcome his grief and developed a new form of psychotherapy that encouraged patients to live for the future, not in the past.
This volume is the life story of medicine and ministry-a life lived in medical work in Bahrain as the first doctor trained as an internist at the American Mission Hospital. Corine examines the transitions in the state of Bahrain, the state of medicine, and her own growth, both spiritually and medically in a joyous story of a life lived in service to others from 1964 through the first Gulf War into the dawn of the twenty-first century. Corine's theme is on changes-transitions-in society, in the world of medicine, and in her own life. This volume is a fascinating account of the changing world of medicine and its daily application in the society of the Arabian Gulf. Corine served as a medical missionary for the Reformed Church in America.