
Cornelia Lehn (1920–2005)
Author of I Heard Good News Today: Stories for Children
About the Author
Works by Cornelia Lehn
A Bible Story Book 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1920-12-15
- Date of death
- 2005-07-02
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Canadian Mennonite Bible College
Bethel College, North Newton
University of Iowa (MA|Journalism) - Nationality
- Russia
Canada - Birthplace
- Leonadewka, Ukraine
- Place of death
- Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada
- Map Location
- Ukraine
Canada
Members
Reviews
I always loved the bold lines and colors in this version of the Sun and the Wind. The large format allows for one to feel the enormity of the weather, and the chalk-like drawings invite one to absorb the story calmly and simply.
I'm delighted that Sonlight Curriculum (http://www.sonlight.com) has added this book to its offerings for their Core K program. I first purchased this book around 1997 at a missions conference I attended and have enjoyed reading it to my children ever since.
Each "chapter" is short (ranging from just under a page to about two pages in length), just right for the attention span of younger children.
The stories are told chronologically, beginning with four narratives based on biblical passages, show more then continue on to some very early missionaries during the first few centuries of the Church. It continues by focusing on various regions of the world and tells stories (again chronologically) of laudable individuals--some well-known and other simply "regular people" on into the late 20th century. The regions covered are Europe, India, China, Southeast Asia, Japan, Taiwan, Africa, Latin America and North America.
Another thing I just love about this book is that it doesn't merely focus on people from Western nations, but also includes stories of individuals from a number of Third World cultures who have played a vital part in reaching the Lost in their part of the world. Additionally, the people covered are from a variety of Christian backgrounds.
If you have a heart for the world and want to pass that on to your young children, this book is a good starting point. show less
Each "chapter" is short (ranging from just under a page to about two pages in length), just right for the attention span of younger children.
The stories are told chronologically, beginning with four narratives based on biblical passages, show more then continue on to some very early missionaries during the first few centuries of the Church. It continues by focusing on various regions of the world and tells stories (again chronologically) of laudable individuals--some well-known and other simply "regular people" on into the late 20th century. The regions covered are Europe, India, China, Southeast Asia, Japan, Taiwan, Africa, Latin America and North America.
Another thing I just love about this book is that it doesn't merely focus on people from Western nations, but also includes stories of individuals from a number of Third World cultures who have played a vital part in reaching the Lost in their part of the world. Additionally, the people covered are from a variety of Christian backgrounds.
If you have a heart for the world and want to pass that on to your young children, this book is a good starting point. show less
This book is an Aesop fable. It has been retold in this book of the authors interpertation. I don't think I would use this book in the class room. Though the idea of love conquering force is good I don't like how it is presented in a challenge.
One- or two-page biographies of peace heroes and heroines, who showed their faith in the way they lived.
Lists
Sonlight Books (1)
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Members
- 538
- Popularity
- #46,305
- Rating
- 4.3
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 13
- Languages
- 1











