While Mark and I were attending Christ for the Nations Bible College in Dallas Texas, in 1981
I had a full dream and I know the dream was TRUE and I know the dream was from GOD.... (Press 'see more' to continue reading and then open up my writing about my BURDEN FOR CHINA since 1985) I have kept a journal log of these dreams through the years and this was just one dream.
In the dream in 1981, AMERICA was invaded by CHINA.... There were CHINESE MILITARY on every corner of America, CHINESE TANKS, CHINESE FLYING ABOVE, and the CHINESE MILITARY were breaking open our doors in our houses and taking everything pertaining to GOD, the Bible, from the houses and destroying things and they were taking people with them. I could hear gun shots being shot constantly.
In this dream, the CHINESE MILITARY came to our door, they did not knock, but they just kicked down our DOOR... As the military came in, they only spoke in Chinese language demanding and very angry, and they confiscated all of our Christian Books, our Cross Decorations in our house (as they broke them to pieces), and they took our Bibles, the men then took my husband Mark with them...
When these men took my husband with them, I knew in my heart that I would NEVER see Mark again as Mark was going to be martyred for JESUS CHRIST...
When I woke I shared this dream to Mark at that time (as I woke him up after the dream)
I shared with Mark - America one day is going to be INVADED BY THE CHINESE MILITARY... I know this in my heart. Mark shared with me at that time (as I journal this in my daily journal) 'Do not fear Dear Jane, what they can do to your body, but fear GOD - for we are only passing through while on this earth'.... 'Praise JESUS for He will be with you and with me when that day comes. 'Do not fear'.... 'You will be safe in God's hands'... 'we will meet together on the other side'...
Also I have had a real burden for the people of CHINA since the year of 1985. In 1984 the Lord had spoken to my heart to dedicate the entire year of 1985 to HIM on my knees before HIM as an Intercessor and reading of HIS WORD. I obeyed and gave the entire year of 198...5 to the Lord. Many days I literally would spend 8-10 hours on my knees in worship, praise, prayer, intercessory, and reading of HIS WORD. He told me to do this for HIM so I obeyed. During that year the Lord gave me a great burder for the NATION OF CHINA.
He (God) spoke to my own heart that there would be a great REVIVAL coming but this REVIVAL would not be in America but it would be in the nation of CHINA and when that REVIVAL came and the WORLD sees this REVIVAL OF GOD upon the nation of China that we need to LOOK UP as HIS TIME TO COME IS DRAWING NEAR....
THE WORLD IS GOING TO SEE REVIVAL COMING OUT OF CHINA.... BUT THAT THIS REVIVAL IN CHINA WILL ALSO HAVE A GREAT COST FOR MANY PEOPLE IN THE END....
I have been conveyed by a person that China Government is going toward opening up to their people Facebook with Limits. But when this happens and I or YOU connect with the people to not share about human rights in China, or Persecutions in China, or Chinese Government of any form ... but only share about God's Word, and God's love and this will be safe.
Please join me to PRAY for this happening.... of China opening up their doors to Facebook.
This is exciting news.
Please open up and see: http://rcmi.wordpress.com/
REVIVAL CHINESE MINISTRIES INTERNATIONAL.... This is awesome....
The exciting days of revival are here. People are hungry for God's presence and for His word. Nothing can stop the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ frombeing preached. Jesus Christ is Lord
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLT2lgUQ6Y
CHINA REVIVAL (700 CLUB 2012)
China Open Doors christian martyr horror massacre WW nuclear 2012
World Watch China Christian Martyr Persecuted Church
天父家书--- father's love letter (Chinese Mandarin narrative)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CcKYDz-1FA
J. Hudson Taylor (1832-1905) was an English missionary to China. Founded the China Inland Mission which at his death included 205 mission stations with over 800 missionaries, and 125,000 Chinese Christians.
J. Hudson Taylor (1832-1905) was an English missionary to China. Founded the China Inland Mission which at his death included 205 mission stations with over 800 missionaries, and 125,000 Chinese Christians. |
Life and Ministry of James Hudson Taylor. by Ed Reese. J. Hudson Taylor. Short biography. James Hudson Taylor. Founder of China Inland Mission. J. Hudson Taylor: God's Mighty Man of Prayer. J. Hudson Taylor: Founder of China Inland Mission. Hudson Taylor. Chronology of his life. J. Hudson Taylor, Founder of the China Inland Mission. Conversion of J. Hudson Taylor: Founder of China Inland Mission. Hudson Taylor. Short biography for young people. Echoes from Glory. Selective sayings/portrait of Taylor. Writings: A Retrospect. by J. Hudson Taylor. The story of his early life to his early missionary experience in China. Chapters 1-9. eBook Recommended Books: Hudson Taylor's Spiritual Secret (Moody Classics) by Dr. & Mrs. Howard Taylor. Chicago, IL: Moody Press, 2009. ISBN 0802456588. 240 pages. First published in 1932. Hudson Taylor by J. Hudson Taylor. Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 1987. ISBN 0871239515. 159 pages. Autobiography. Also issued under title A Retrospect. See more recommended Christian biographies. Maria Dyer Taylor (1837-1870): Daughter of one of the first missionaries to China, she was orphaned at the age of 10. She was a missionary to China when she married Hudson Taylor, January 20, 1858. They had seven children: Grace, Herbert Hudson, Frederick Howard (who would later co-author Hudson's biography), Samuel, Maria, Charles Edward, and Noel. Being fluent in the Ningpo dialect, she helped Hudson with translation work. They had been married for 12 1/2 years when at 33 yrs. of age, Maria died of cholera in 1870. She was a "tower of strength" and a comfort to her husband. In her own words, she was "more intimately acquainted than anyone else can be with his trials, his temptations, his conflicts, his failures and failings, and his conquests." Jennie Faulding Taylor (1843-1904): Another CIM missionary, she became the second wife of Hudson Taylor in 1871. They had two children (a son, Ernest, born in 1875 and a daughter, Amy, born in 1876), plus the four from his previous marriage and an adopted daughter. Jennie cared for her husband through injury and illness, edited the periodical China's Millions for the China Inland Mission, had a special ministry among the women. In her later years she traveled with Hudson Taylor, speaking, writing, and organizing the work of the Mission. She died in 1904, preceding Hudson Taylor who died in 1905. |
More Sources of Information: eBooks About Hudson Taylor. |
LOTTIE MOON
Southern Baptist Missionary to
Chinahttp://trailblazerbooks.com/books/Moon/Moon-bio.html
(see link above to read more on Lottie Moon)Lottie Moon was born in 1840, third in a family of five girls and two boys, on the family’s fifteen-hundred-acre tobacco plantation known as Viewmont. Her father, Edward Moon, was the largest slaveholder (fifty-two slaves) in Albemarle County; he was also a merchant and a lay leader in the Baptist church. But Lottie was only thirteen when her father died in a riverboat accidentThe Moon family valued education, and at age fourteen Lottie went to school at the Virginia Female Seminary [e.g. high school] and later the Albemarle Female Institute, where she earned both her bachelor’s and Master of Arts degree in teaching. A spirited and outspoken girl, Lottie was indifferent to her Southern Baptist upbringing until her late teens, when God touched her heart during a spiritual revival at Albemarle.There were precious few opportunities for educated females in the mid-1800s, though her older sister Orianna became a physician and served as a Confederate doctor during the Civil War. Lottie helped her mother maintain Viewmont during the war, once hiding the family silver in a field from approaching Union soldiers, but when the threat evaporated, she was unable to find it again.After the Civil War, Lottie taught at female academies first in Danville, Kentucky, and later helped set up Cartersville Female High School in Georgia. The school was thriving academically (though not financially) under her leadership as associate principal when she felt a quite different call: to go to China as a missionary.Single women on the mission field? Most mission work at that time was done by married men. But the wives of China missionaries T. P. Crawford and Landrum Holmes had discovered an important reality: Only women could reach Chinese women, and they needed help. To everyone’s surprise, Lottie’s younger sister Edmonia accepted a call to go to North China in 1872. Lottie followed a year later. She was thirty-three years old.
(see link above to read more on Lottie Moon)Lottie Moon was born in 1840, third in a family of five girls and two boys, on the family’s fifteen-hundred-acre tobacco plantation known as Viewmont. Her father, Edward Moon, was the largest slaveholder (fifty-two slaves) in Albemarle County; he was also a merchant and a lay leader in the Baptist church. But Lottie was only thirteen when her father died in a riverboat accidentThe Moon family valued education, and at age fourteen Lottie went to school at the Virginia Female Seminary [e.g. high school] and later the Albemarle Female Institute, where she earned both her bachelor’s and Master of Arts degree in teaching. A spirited and outspoken girl, Lottie was indifferent to her Southern Baptist upbringing until her late teens, when God touched her heart during a spiritual revival at Albemarle.There were precious few opportunities for educated females in the mid-1800s, though her older sister Orianna became a physician and served as a Confederate doctor during the Civil War. Lottie helped her mother maintain Viewmont during the war, once hiding the family silver in a field from approaching Union soldiers, but when the threat evaporated, she was unable to find it again.After the Civil War, Lottie taught at female academies first in Danville, Kentucky, and later helped set up Cartersville Female High School in Georgia. The school was thriving academically (though not financially) under her leadership as associate principal when she felt a quite different call: to go to China as a missionary.Single women on the mission field? Most mission work at that time was done by married men. But the wives of China missionaries T. P. Crawford and Landrum Holmes had discovered an important reality: Only women could reach Chinese women, and they needed help. To everyone’s surprise, Lottie’s younger sister Edmonia accepted a call to go to North China in 1872. Lottie followed a year later. She was thirty-three years old.
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