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Price: $24.99
You Save: 20 %
Your Price: $19.99
Shipping Weight: 0.40 pounds
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THIS DVD IS PLAYABLE IN ALL REGIONS.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
-English, Spanish, Portuguese, Tagalog, Hindi, Telugu, Tamil
and Malayalam languages
-Chapter titles for easy scene access
-Commentary from filmmakers: Ken Curtis, Tony Tew, Gordon
Severance, Gary Moore
-Behind-the-scenes look with actors' comments and biographies
-Theme song (music video and live performance at Billy Graham
Crusade)
-Four-part curriculum video supplement with study guides in pdf
format
He sailed in 1793 to India with a reluctant wife and four
children to bring the message of Jesus. There he encountered so
much hardship it is amazing he didn’t abandon his mission and
go home. But he stayed for over 40 years.
One issue that tormented him was sati—the burning alive of
widows when their husbands died. He would not rest until this
practice was stopped. Facing insurmountable odds, he “plodded”
on to influence the abolition of sati and to become the revered
“Friend of India” and “Father of Modern Missions.”
He oversaw more translations of the Bible than had been done in
all previous Christian history combined. Life was never easy
for Carey. But he simply refused to quit, even when a
devastating fire destroyed years of his literary work. His
legacy has inspired countless others from his own day to the
present. William Carey shows dramatically how a life dedicated
to God and obedient to His calling can make a profound
difference in the world. Starring Richard Attlee, Lynette
Edwards and Julie-Kate Olivier. A Christian History Institute
Production.
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Time: 1 hr 37 min |
Production Year: 1998 |
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Review: Visual Parables - Fall
2004
Vision Video has good cause to
be proud again with its adaptation to DVD of its fictionalized
biography of William Carey, often regarded as the Father of the
Modern Missionary Movement. Under the direction of director/writer
Tony Tew, the excellent Anglo-Indian cast, headed by Richard Atlee
as Carey, effectively brings to life the people and times of the
late 18th and early 19th century. No one was less likely to become
the founder of such a great movement as this impoverished, largely
self-taught cobbler turned Baptist preacher. He was not a very good
speaker, but still, inspired by the stories of the Moravian
missionaries who had evangelized the natives of the West Indies, he
was filled with zeal to spread the Good News to people in far
places, despite the disinterest and ridicule from fellow clergy. He
helped found a missionary society, and in 1793 found himself with
his wife, two sons and sister-in-law in India. Carey’s 40 year work
in India showed what a dedicated person of faith could accomplish
when, as he wrote, we “expect great things from God; attempt great
things for God.” The film’s title comes from the old Chinese
proverb about lighting a candle rather than cursing the darkness.
It also owes much to Jesus’ charge that his followers become the
“light of the world.” This fine film shows that few have fulfilled
this charge as fully as did William Carey. It should be in every
church library and used to acquaint young and old with the roots of
the church’s great missionary heritage.
Awards
Best Drama
Won at CEVMA (Christian
European Visual Media Association) |
Finalist Status
Won at the New York
Festivals |
Bronze
Plaque
Won at the Columbus
International Film and Video Festival |
Gold
Award
Won at the Christian
Broadcasting Commission of the UK |
Silver
Angel Award
Won at the 23rd Annual Angel
Awards |
Golden
Eagle Award
Won at the CINE Golden Eagle
Awards |
Gold
Award
Won at the Worldfest-Houston
Film Festival |
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