Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Lottie Moon fue la hija de una adinerada familia cristiana. En 1854, asistió al Instituto Femenino Albemarle en Virginia; luego a la Universidad Hollins, graduándose en 1861. Lottie mantuvo las más altas calificaciones de su clase y fue una de las primeras mujeres en completar una maestría.Después de la universidad, Lottie se convirtió en maestra y, más adelante, ella y una amiga ...

  2. 10 de nov. de 2012 · The life of Lottie Moon, missionary to China. Includes quotes mixed with current workers who have followed in her path. IMB production for 2012.

  3. Permítale a los niños dibujar varios niños chinos alrededor del nombre.Dibuje o recorte galletas redondas para pegar en el dibujo. Escriba: Lottie Moon, la Dama Galleta, quien compartía a Jesús con otros. CAMPO DE MISIÓN: Anime a los niños a ir uno a uno a la pizarra y hacer un dibujo de un CAMPO DE MISIÓN al que los niños deseen ir.

  4. 5 de dic. de 2021 · November 28 – December 5, 2021National Offering Goal: $185 million. The Lottie Moon Christmas Offering® is an annual offering collected by Southern Baptists to support international missions. The offering was officially named in 1918 by Woman’s Missionary Union in honor of the missionary to China who urged churches to start it and give ...

  5. 29 de nov. de 2016 · Lottie defied the limits of generational, cultural, and missional norms for the sake of the gospel. I want to be so bold. With nearly three billion people who have never heard of Jesus, we should dare be the same kind of rebel, disrupting casual mission thinking and ambitiously resolved to get the gospel to all nations at all costs.

  6. 30 de jul. de 2009 · In her life as a missionary in China, Lottie Moon stood barely more than four feet tall.In death, she weighed about 50 pounds. Her impact on the history of missions, however, has been enormous ...

  7. 1 de feb. de 2012 · Miss Moon expressed, “I have long known God wanted me in China. I am now ready to go.” Charlotte Digges Moon was officially appointed by the Foreign Mission board on July 7, 1873. She began to make plans for her departure by visiting friends and family. Finally on September 1 st of 1873, Lottie Moon set sail from San Francisco for China.