
Heidi Baker (1) (1959–)
Author of Always Enough: God's Miraculous Provision among the Poorest Children on Earth
For other authors named Heidi Baker, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Heidi Baker founded Iris Global with her husband, Rolland. Together they served as missionaries in Indonesia, Hong Kong, and the streets of London before following God's calling in 1995 to Mozambique. Having faced overwhelming need, the Bakers now watch God provide miraculously for over 7,000 show more children. Heidi is the author of Compelled by Love and co-author of Always Enough and Expecting Miracles with her husband. show less
Works by Heidi Baker
Always Enough: God's Miraculous Provision among the Poorest Children on Earth (2003) 167 copies, 4 reviews
Compelled by Love: How to change the world through the simple power of love in action (2008) 135 copies, 4 reviews
Birthing the Miraculous: The Power of Personal Encounters with God to Change Your Life and the World (2014) 64 copies, 1 review
Expecting Miracles: True Stories of God's Supernatural Power and How You Can Experience It (2007) 37 copies
Associated Works
The Risk Factor: Crossing the Chicken Line Into Your Supernatural Destiny (2011) — Foreword — 21 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1959
- Gender
- female
- Organizations
- IRIS Ministries
- Relationships
- Baker, Rolland (spouse)
- Nationality
- USA
- Map Location
- Mozambique
Members
Reviews
I first became aware of the ministry of Heidi and Rolland Baker through a class I took in seminary. My professor (Bob Ekblad) is an activist who works with people on the margins and is passionate about the work of the Spirit. He held up the Bakers as exemplars because of their tireless work in mission and their passion for supernatural ministry. I had seen video clips of interviews of Heidi Baker but knew little about her (and Rolland’s) mission organization or their work in Mozambique. So show more I was excited to read Learning to Love: Passion, Compassion and the Essence of the Gospel.
Heidi and Rolland take turns narrating their work in Africa and around the world. Learning to Love tells of their experience entering into the suffering of Christ, loving people, responding to God’s leading and seeing Him work in often incredible ways. The passion and zeal the Bakers have for sharing the gospel is infectious. While many charismatic authors in the United States preach prosperity, the Bakers have given their lives sacrificially to see the people of Mozambique and around the globe come to saving faith in Christ. They speak of miracles and God’s provision but they also have really entered into the suffering of the nations they’ve served. This book is their story of ‘loving God and the person in front of you.” There mission has involved them in caring for children and orphans, planting churches, leading bush revivals, prayers of healing, digging wells, launching schools, providing needed physical care and more. Through it all they have sought to be faithful to God’s call on their life.
Yet Learning to Love was a difficult read for me. To me, the book reads like a series of support letters for Iris Ministries (their organization). They are passionate and expound on where God is working in their midst, but there seems to be little cohesive organization to their chapters. I also found that I still know very little about their mission philosophy (other than an expectancy to see God at work). I like that they are listening to the Spirit and expect miracles and are driven by a concern for the people of Mozambique, but because this book tells you the breadth of all that they do, you don’t get a sense of what their long term commitment to one place, or one group of people is like. There is more to their story which I would like to hear.
I do respect that these charismatic missioners have seen God bring healing and new life in their mission and have come to expect God’s supernatural ministry. This is the experience of the global church and too often us educated Americans seek naturalistic explanations instead of the God of Grace.
I am not sure that I can say I loved this book, but I did like Heidi and Rolland and what I heard from their story. I give this book 3 stars and am interested in hearing more about their work.
Thank you to Chosen Books for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. show less
Heidi and Rolland take turns narrating their work in Africa and around the world. Learning to Love tells of their experience entering into the suffering of Christ, loving people, responding to God’s leading and seeing Him work in often incredible ways. The passion and zeal the Bakers have for sharing the gospel is infectious. While many charismatic authors in the United States preach prosperity, the Bakers have given their lives sacrificially to see the people of Mozambique and around the globe come to saving faith in Christ. They speak of miracles and God’s provision but they also have really entered into the suffering of the nations they’ve served. This book is their story of ‘loving God and the person in front of you.” There mission has involved them in caring for children and orphans, planting churches, leading bush revivals, prayers of healing, digging wells, launching schools, providing needed physical care and more. Through it all they have sought to be faithful to God’s call on their life.
Yet Learning to Love was a difficult read for me. To me, the book reads like a series of support letters for Iris Ministries (their organization). They are passionate and expound on where God is working in their midst, but there seems to be little cohesive organization to their chapters. I also found that I still know very little about their mission philosophy (other than an expectancy to see God at work). I like that they are listening to the Spirit and expect miracles and are driven by a concern for the people of Mozambique, but because this book tells you the breadth of all that they do, you don’t get a sense of what their long term commitment to one place, or one group of people is like. There is more to their story which I would like to hear.
I do respect that these charismatic missioners have seen God bring healing and new life in their mission and have come to expect God’s supernatural ministry. This is the experience of the global church and too often us educated Americans seek naturalistic explanations instead of the God of Grace.
I am not sure that I can say I loved this book, but I did like Heidi and Rolland and what I heard from their story. I give this book 3 stars and am interested in hearing more about their work.
Thank you to Chosen Books for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. show less
Birthing the Miraculous: The Power of Personal Encounters with God to Change Your Life and the World by Heidi Baker
This book came into my life at a perfect time when I was looking to go deeper. I didn't start to feel excited and challenged until the fourth chapter. I read one chapter a day alongside my devotions. I noticed my mindset over the next weeks began to suddenly become more sensitive to spiritual things around me and was quicker to be bold in my outreach to others, to pray over the sick, to speak life, to push into my circumstances.
I would recommend this book to mature Christian believers. show more While young or new christians can read it and be inspired by it, I believe it best read after basic principals of following Jesus have been learned and walked out for a short season
This book totally gave my boldness a boost and I give it 5 stars for being effective in that regard. show less
I would recommend this book to mature Christian believers. show more While young or new christians can read it and be inspired by it, I believe it best read after basic principals of following Jesus have been learned and walked out for a short season
This book totally gave my boldness a boost and I give it 5 stars for being effective in that regard. show less
Compelled by Love: How to change the world through the simple power of love in action by Heidi Baker
Mother Teresa wrote,
"The world today is hungry not only for bread but hungry for love; hungry to be wanted, to be loved. They're hungry to feel that presence of Christ."
This is one of those books that is hard to put down. It's hard to put down because one senses that its words embody "that presence of Christ." Not only does Heidi's life illustrate Jesus' beatitudes incredibly well but it reminds us that love gives birth to miracles.
Small things done with great love will change the world.
"The world today is hungry not only for bread but hungry for love; hungry to be wanted, to be loved. They're hungry to feel that presence of Christ."
This is one of those books that is hard to put down. It's hard to put down because one senses that its words embody "that presence of Christ." Not only does Heidi's life illustrate Jesus' beatitudes incredibly well but it reminds us that love gives birth to miracles.
Small things done with great love will change the world.
Compelled by Love: How to change the world through the simple power of love in action by Heidi Baker
This is such a beautiful book written by a woman who really knows and loves Jesus. In the first few pages I already felt the tears coming, and it was so refreshing to read Heidi Baker's simple, sincere account of who God is and how He moves, even today. Definitely a book to revisit once in a while!
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 15
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 553
- Popularity
- #45,137
- Rating
- 4.3
- Reviews
- 13
- ISBNs
- 37
- Languages
- 5












