Ruth Bell Graham
Heroes of the Faith|January - March 2017

The woman behind the best-known evangelist of the 20th century.

Ruth Bell Graham
Ruth bell graham was born in 1920 in Qingjiang, Jiangsu, the second of five children. Her parents, Dr Nelson and Virginia bell, were medical missionaries at love and Mercy Hospital in Tsingkiangpu, China, in the difficult years from 1916 until World War II began.

As she grew up, Ruth had no intention of getting married, much less to a man who would become one of the most famous figures in the world. She had seen missionary family life too close up: the hardship, the loneliness, the danger, as her parents lost colleagues to political violence and Ruth’s little brother to dysentery.

In spite of this environment, laughter and songs rang out from the bell home on the hospital grounds. she and her siblings, Rosa, Virginia and Clayton, learned the basics of Christian faith early through their parents’ example of daily prayer and bible study, in addition to family prayers before breakfast each morning. Ruth could not remember a morning that her father was not reading his bible or kneeling in prayer when she got up.

In addition to their deep spiritual devotion, Ruth also admired her parents’ courage and kindness as they ministered in an often hostile environment. this inspired her to live a life of Christian witness – maybe, she thought, as an ‘old maid missionary’ in Tibet.

at the age of 13 she was enrolled in high school in Pyongyang, Korea, Where she studied for three years and then completed her high school education at Montreat, north Carolina, while her parents were there on furlough.

In keeping with her youthful aspirations, Ruth did indeed lead a life of witness, but certainly not the way she planned. While studying at Wheaton college, she met up with a fellow student, a young baptist preacher called Billy graham. one Sunday morning, she heard him praying during a prayer meeting: “there is a man who knows to whom he is speaking,” she thought.

This story is from the January - March 2017 edition of Heroes of the Faith.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the January - March 2017 edition of Heroes of the Faith.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM HEROES OF THE FAITHView All
Telling Tales About Canterbury
Heroes of the Faith

Telling Tales About Canterbury

How those tall stories of pig's bones and gospel heroes contain more than a hint of reality.

time-read
2 mins  |
October - December 2019
Sophie Scholl
Heroes of the Faith

Sophie Scholl

The Young Woman Who Defied Hitler

time-read
9 mins  |
October - December 2019
Jonathan Goforth Revivalist Apostle To China
Heroes of the Faith

Jonathan Goforth Revivalist Apostle To China

Jonathan Goforth was born, the seventh of eleven children, in February 1859 near London, Ontario, in Canada. His parents were hard-working farmers and, if the young Jonathan learned about the things of God through his devout mother, he also learned hard work from his father, who once went to Hamilton for food and walked all the way back through the bush – a distance of 70 miles – with a sack of flour on his back!

time-read
8 mins  |
October - December 2019
John Wycliffe
Heroes of the Faith

John Wycliffe

Morning Star of the English Reformation.

time-read
10+ mins  |
October - December 2019
Billy Nicholson The Irish Whitefield
Heroes of the Faith

Billy Nicholson The Irish Whitefield

William Patteson Nicholson (1876-1959) was a Presbyterian preacher and evangelist born in Bangor, Co Down. Nicknamed ‘The Tornado of the Pulpit’, Nicholson spent his early years on his father’s cargo ship, but began to preach in 1899 at the age of 23. He was known for his ‘men-only’ meetings and straightforward language. In the Belfast shipyard of Harland & Wolff, a ‘Nicholson shed’ was erected to house stolen tools that newly converted workers returned as a result of Nicholson’s preaching!

time-read
6 mins  |
October - December 2019
Wth Richards - Pentecostal Statesman
Heroes of the Faith

Wth Richards - Pentecostal Statesman

During the ’60s and early ’70s, a dynamic Welsh preacher achieved what many of his peers at that time thought impossible: he was able to be fully Pentecostal in outlook, pastor a thriving and growing church, and yet also command the deepest respect of christians from many different denominations.

time-read
8 mins  |
#30 Apr-Jun 2017
The Parachute Padre
Heroes of the Faith

The Parachute Padre

An unlikely war hero who volunteered to serve miles behind enemy lines alongside one of the most ferocious fighting units of the British Army

time-read
8 mins  |
October – December 2017
Time To Reform Our View Of The Reformation?
Heroes of the Faith

Time To Reform Our View Of The Reformation?

Five hundred years ago a cataclysmic change was begun in the Western church when a renegade monk nailed 95 theses to a church door in Wittenberg.

time-read
7 mins  |
July - September 2017
The Big Picture
Heroes of the Faith

The Big Picture

The much-acclaimed film ‘Hidden Figures’ is the heart-warming real life story of three African-American women who worked on the space programme in Virginia in the 1950s.

time-read
2 mins  |
#30 Apr-Jun 2017
The Cambridge Seven
Heroes of the Faith

The Cambridge Seven

How a move of God among Britain’s students answered the desperate prayer of a missionary on the other side of the world.

time-read
10 mins  |
#30 Apr-Jun 2017