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Archive for new hope

May
16

Author Kathy Howard to Speak at 2012 Bible Study Expo

by newhope

May 16, 2012—Bible study leaders are blocking off the afternoon of May 17 to attend the online 2012 Bible Study Expo.

The event will feature interviews and opportunities to connect with Bible study book authors, Bible study leadership trainers, and other Bible Study leaders. New Hope Publishers’ own author Kathy Howard will be among the special guests.

To attend the online Expo (May 17, 1–5 Central), which is 100% free, visit BibleStudyExpo.com.

Tapping into modern technology, the 4-hour event revolves around 15-minute interviews with authors to be aired over Internet radio. Guests may listen via computer from home, office or car, or on their cell phone from anywhere.

Harnessing women’s ability to multitask, guests are invited to listen to author interviews while attending Facebook and Twitter parties.

Before and after the Expo, guests are encouraged to download up to 6 MP3 training modules, which were developed specifically for Bible study leaders. Topics include: How to Launch a Study, How to Lead Great Discussions, How to Handle the Tough Stuff, Adding Fun to Your Bible Study, and more.

“Bible Study leaders don’t get much attention!” says Expo hostess, Marnie Swedberg. “The Bible Study Expo gives the authors, publishers, and sponsors a chance to applaud what’s being done by these unsung heroes in the trenches every single week. It’s all done online during this fun afternoon set aside to remember them, encourage them, and celebrate what they are doing, while providing them with practical help and a sense of community.”

This year’s guest lineup includes Kathy Howard, Sheila Walsh, Pam Farrel, Babbie Mason, Tammie Head, and about a dozen other authors with recently released Bible study books.

To attend the online Expo, which is 100% free, visit BibleStudyExpo.com. While there, register in the drawings for free Bible study books and begin to connect directly with the Bible Study Expo hostesses and book authors via your favorite social networking sites.


About Kathy Howard

Through her Bible teaching and writing, Kathy Howard helps women live an unshakeable faith. She encourages them to stand firm on our rock-solid God, no matter the circumstances of life.

Kathy has been teaching the Bible for more than 20 years to a varied audience—everyone from middle school students to teen moms to church leaders. She has a master’s degree in Christian education from the Canadian Southern Baptist Seminary and served on a church staff in Midland, Texas, for 5 years until her family’s recent move to the Houston area. Kathy has authored 3 Bible studies: Before His Throne, God’s Truth Revealed, and Unshakeable Faith.

Kathy and her husband, Wayne, have 3 children, 2 sons-in-law, and 1 precious grandbaby. Find out about her speaking ministry and get more discipleship tools and leader helps at her Web site, kathyhoward.org.


About New Hope Publishers

Representing more than 80 authors and more than 130 individual works, the mission of New Hope® Publishers is to provide books that challenge readers to understand and be radically involved in the mission of God. New Hope Publishers is the general trade publishing imprint for WMU®, a missions auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention. New Hope Publishers is a member of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA).

For more information about New Hope Publishers, visit NewHopeDigital.com.

0 Categories : News
Jan
28

New Hope Publishers Marketing Strategist Position Open

by newhope

We are delighted to post a new position for New Hope Publishers. Please email HR@wmu.org for more information or to submit a resume.

Job Title: New Hope Publishers Marketing Strategist
Role: to serve as a member of the New Hope Publishers (NHP) Team, and to provide strategic direction to all marketing activities.
Responsibilities:
• Develops and implements strategic direction for marketing activities in collaboration with the NHP Team including marketing elements of http://NewHopeDigital.com/.
• Leads the NHP Team in the development of titles and covers, including research, testing, and evaluation.
• Reads manuscripts for key selling features and makes recommendations related to product specifications, quantity, and pricing.
• Directs the planning and management of marketing budgets and evaluates the return on expenditures. Guides the work of independent contractors.
• Plans sales initiatives with sales representatives and equips sales team with tools to successfully sell NHP books.
• Prepares for and represents NHP at trade shows for strategic sales initiatives including the NHP booth, sales goals, and promotions.
• Prepares metadata for the Master Products List, book and eBook distributors; and retail accounts.
Qualifications:
• Undergraduate degree in marketing, business, or a related discipline.
• One to three years progressive work experience.
• Skilled in communication (written and verbal), organization, project management, and strategic planning.
• Detail and multi-task oriented.
• Understanding of and involvement in a Christian community
• Knowledge of the publishing industry and experience using word processing and spreadsheet computer software, preferred.
To submit a resume to Human Resources:
email: HR@wmu.org
fax: (205) 995-4827
Address: 100 Missionary Ridge, Birmingham, AL 35242
For More Information about WMU, Visit:
http://wmu.com/
0 Categories : Blog
Jan
9

New Hope Publishers Recognizes Human Trafficking Awareness Day on January 11

by newhope

(BIRMINGHAM, Ala.)—January 9, 2011— January 11 is Human Trafficking Awareness Day and New Hope Publishers offers many valuable resources that shed light and give actionable steps to help end modern slavery.

As seen on Fox news, Not in My Town: Exposing and Ending Human Trafficking and Modern-Day Slavery (978-1-59669-301-2, $19.99) answers questions and promotes discussion about the slavery system that crisscrosses Atlanta, Orlando, Las Vegas, New York, California, Texas, North Carolina, Haiti, Amsterdam, India, Cambodia, and beyond. The authors’ gripping journey shocks but also motivates and provides resources to equip new generations of abolitionists from all corners of society and diverse worldviews who share the common call to stop injustice. DVD included with book.

New Hope Publishers also offers the “Freedom” fiction series by award-winning author Kathi Macias. Deliver Me from Evil (978-1-59669-306-7, $14.99) is the first release in the series and Special Delivery (978-1-59669-307-4, $14.99) will be available this March.

Watch for a special article from Kathi Macias scheduled to be posted on January 11 on this site.

The New Hope Publishers Web site offers several podcasts, articles/columns, and videos on human trafficking. You may be especially interested in the article, “Ideas and Resources to Join the Fight Against Modern Slavery,” which, in one place, lists and links to much of the New Hope Digital content.

Please also consider supporting the efforts of WorldCrafts, our ministry partner, and its Set1Free campaign. The Set1Free campaign highlights artisan groups working with women freed from sexual exploitation and/or others at risk of human trafficking.

About New Hope Publishers

Representing more than 80 authors and more than 130 individual works, the mission of New Hope® Publishers is to provide books that challenge readers to understand and be radically involved in the mission of God. New Hope Publishers is the general trade publishing imprint for WMU®, a missions auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention. New Hope Publishers is a member of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA).

For more information about New Hope Publishers, visit www.NewHopeDigital.com.

 

1 Categories : News
Nov
8

Be Encouraged: God Is Doing a Good Work in Us

by newhope

Editor’s note: This is the first in a series of brief articles from New Hope authors this month on the theme Thirst No More: Satisfied in God and His Word. 

by Jason C. Dukes

I am sure of this, that He who started a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.—Philippians 1:6 (HCSB)

Recently, our church family has been walking together through some crunch-time decisions. We’ve been gaining some clarity with regard to our next steps on mission together to neighbors and nations.

One morning when I was just being honest with the Lord about some of my frustrations and disappointments with where we are as a church family, a message from a friend popped up on my phone. It was simply this verse: Philippians 1:6.

It felt as though a flood came over me encouraging me to stay devoted and faithful—to keep sowing those seeds we have been sowing for more than 7 years now. I sensed that we will see more and more of what Jesus intended for His church, even if it means hard transitions that none of us expect.

My cup overflowed.


Pastor Jason C. Dukes, author of Live Sent: You Are a Letter, is a follower and a leader, a husband and a father, a learner and a teacher. His desire is to equip the church to be making disciples. Since 2004 he has been on an amazing journey with Westpoint Church in the Orlando, Florida, area.

His next book, Beyond My Church: Thinking and Living So That the World Might Know, will go on sale this December.

Scripture taken from the Holman Christian Standard Bible ® Copyright © 2003, 2002, 2000, 1999 by Holman Bible Publishers. All rights reserved.

0 Categories : Articles
Oct
18

Different Callings, Same Lord: New Hope Authors Living Sent (4)

by newhope

I’m living as a missionary by using words to go into all the world and preach the gospel—even when I can’t. God has gifted me as a writer and called me to “write the vision . . . and make it plain” (Habakkuk 2:2), and that is what I endeavor to do through stories about believers in faraway lands who suffer and even pay the ultimate price for their faith.

I pray these “fiction with a mission” books, as well as my nonfiction books, will encourage readers to commit to a deeper life of prayer and service to God and others.

—Kathi Macias, author of A Christmas Journey Home and Deliver Me from Evil (latest releases)

 

I am living sent by teaching at a public high school in the inner city of San Antonio. And I am participating in the life of that community as I attend ball games and concerts, weddings and quinceañeras, and family barbecues.

Every day, I pray for each of my students and their families.

I arrive on campus ready to teach with my best effort, despite the challenges inherent with poverty, but also asking God to help me recognize any moments where He may be able to use me to speak or act in His name.

I ask Him to enable me to demonstrate His love to each person I encounter that day, and pray that what my students and their families see in me will point them toward Him.

—Martha Singleton, coauthor with Greg Singleton of Let It Shine! (latest release)

 

I’m a home missionary, and I am one because I thought God was calling me to be a foreign missionary.

It was something I didn’t want to do; nevertheless, I went to seminary to prepare and had my eyes opened to the excitement and challenge of missions. More important, I fully surrendered myself to God.

When I did, the urgency to be a foreign missionary dissipated, but the urgency to do missions didn’t. I discovered you can be a missionary anywhere as you see opportunities and take action, which my role as a homemaker allows me to do.

—Brenda Poinsett, author of The Friendship Factor (latest release)

 

I’m living sent by my commitment to be on mission for Christ each day. It is not something I do, but who I am.

The college campus (Belmont University) where I work is my mission field. My office is a place students can find love, compassion, acceptance, and prayer. It is God’s call on my life and He has equipped me for this service. He calls me daily to be salt and light to the world.

My prayer each morning in my quiet time is: “God, let me be Your instrument of love and peace on campus today. I look forward to experiencing You in a unique way. Help me to recognize that You are arranging the divine appointments You will give me.” 

Then, I come to work expecting God to show up!

—Betty Wiseman, author of Bounce the Balls and They Will Come

Editor’s note: This is the fourth and final article in a series of articles highlighting how some of our New Hope authors are living sent, or living like a missionary.

 

0 Categories : Articles
Aug
18

Find Out How New Hope Authors Are Living Sent (3)

by newhope

Editor’s note: This is the third in a continuing series of articles in which New Hope Publishers authors share how they are living sent, or living like a missionary.

“Missionary Debbie, thank you for coming.” Startled, I looked up to see who had called me “Missionary Debbie.” If one of my friends had referred to me as “Missionary Debbie,” it would likely have been said with a tinge of jest.  

However, none of the sisters there flinched. Then I understood. In their eyes I was a missionary. 

On April 2, 2008, God called me to take my P.R.A.Y. with Passion Across the Nation conference to a church in every state in the United States and to not charge my speaking fee or travel expenses. Christ the King Community Church, outside Seattle, Washington, was state 23.

—Debbie Taylor Williams, author of If God Is in Control, Why Am I a Basket Case? (latest release)

He rescued me. He restored me. He rebuilt the broken places. Out of profound gratitude and with great delight, I long to share the reality of His goodness with others. Whether it’s pouring out in a single-parent seminar, a women’s retreat, or behind prison bars to female inmates, I love to share the good news of His deep love and life-saving grace. Most of all, I live sent as I love my husband, scoop up my girl, and take care of the nitty-gritty details of home life. My most critical outreach is behind my own front door as I hold my family close in prayer and serve them through the highs and lows.

—Elsa Kok Colopy, author of A Woman Who Hurts, A God Who Heals (latest release)

I’m living sent as part of a group of people who are dynamically touching the impoverished urban area of my city.

Every Sunday evening, they gather in our home to pray and plan. They look to my wife, Martha, and me for counsel, encouragement, and a place that feels like home to them.

They are a group of 20-somethings, some nudging 30, who are teachers, sociologists, chefs, and accountants— both white- and blue-collar types. Their roots extend from places like Mexico, Nigeria, Venezuela, Hawaii, Boston, the Jersey shore, small town Texas, and inner-city San Antonio. Some have very traditional church backgrounds, and some grew up never seeing inside the doors of a place of worship.   

But they share a purpose and a calling. Our son, Matt, leads this home church. Our focus is ministry to the inner-city community on San Antonio’s Westside. Matt teaches in the high school there, and our church group serves and loves those who live in that area.

We see to it that the people have the basic necessities of life. We weep with them, we celebrate with them, and we advocate for them. And, we point them to Christ.

In living sent in this ministry, I feel spiritually invigorated and alive!

—Greg Singleton, author of Let It Shine! (latest release)

I am living sent in the Yakima Valley of Washington. Not long ago, I thought I was supposed to be living as a missionary in an international setting. Much prayer, planning, and preparation went into the path. God had other plans.

Living sent means doing what He puts in front of me, right where I live. After getting our attention and returning my husband and me to where He wanted us, God narrowed my focus until I noticed what He had for me. God sent me to teach at a Christian school on the Yakama Indian Reservation.

Teaching students from families with a variety of backgrounds, I am blessed with the freedom to share God’s story from the Bible. I am required to teach the Bible! The love of Jesus is shared and discussed. Class begins with a daily prayer. Lunch is preceded by student-led prayer. Issues are dealt with using biblical concepts. Discipline is administered through the teaching of Christian behaviors and morals. Worship is experienced as a student body. Each day, I am able to speak truth about His love and His gift of eternal life through Jesus Christ. That is living sent.

—Angie Quantrell, author of Families on Mission

 

 

0 Categories : Articles
Jun
1

The Invention of the Phonograph and NewHopeDigital.com

by newhope

I recently stood on the lawn of Thomas Edison’s winter home in Fort Myers, Florida. As much as I marvel at his brilliance, I was most impressed with the reason for his inventions. He invented because he saw the needs of the world and wanted to meet those needs. From light bulbs to rubber plants, his goal was to help humanity.

One of the needs he addressed was that of making information accessible to every person in the world. This led to the invention of the phonograph. By 1888 he was producing phonographs for families to purchase for their homes. In an article for the North American Journal, he wrote, “The speeches of orators, the discourses of clergymen, can be had ‘on tap,’ in every house that owns a phonograph.”

Edison’s vision for  the phonograph was 10 years in the making. He believed a time was coming when words would be recorded and heard by people in every home in every nation. Even when he began to sell the phonograph he produced a standardized model to insure every country would be able to use it. He wrote, “a record put upon the machine in New York could be placed on another machine of the same pattern in China and speak exactly as it was spoken to on this continent.” In his article he gave example after example of ways the phonograph would change communication. As we know, it did exactly that.

Like Edison, Great Commission publishers hunger to find new ways to bring the transformational words of their authors to a world where every kind of content is accessible. The need for more Christian content is evident. Who would have dreamed of the proliferation of pornography and violence unavoidable except by complete disengagement from TV and the Web? Who would have imagined that our world would allow a new Web domain just for pornographic content? I suggest it is time for a new domain called .God. While I haven’t invented .God, I do have a vision for delivering Christ-inspired content where every heart and mind can choose to respond, where Christ is already at work making Himself known.

When we first began our journey that has led to NewHopeDigital.com we didn’t realize the ability of our staff and the shared vision of our authors to make this a reality. But when God gives the vision, He also provides everything needed to accomplish it. Thomas Edison said, “If we did all the things we are capable of, we would literally astound ourselves.” The Bible states, “In him we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his will, so that we who were the first to hope in Christ might be to the praise of his glory” (Ephesians 1:11-12 ESV).

New Hope Digital is to the praise of His glory for it brings the needs of the world together with the God-given expertise, ministries, and messages of New Hope’s authors to create a global discussion and response. Our authors are not only writers, but Christ-followers actively involved in living out their faith.

Yesterday’s phonograph is today’s instant message. I believe God knew the spiritual needs of the world would require far more than phonographs in the twenty-first century. New Hope Publishers and our authors share a passion to make Christ known through every means we are capable of providing. We pray NewHopeDigital.com will inspire and encourage you as a Christ follower and that God will empower you to serve Him in your home, your community, and the world.

“Christ himself wrote it—not with ink, but with God’s living Spirit; not chiseled into stone, but carved into human lives—and we publish it” (2 Corinthians 3:3 MSG).

All Scripture quotations marked ESV are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Scripture marked MSG taken from The Message. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group.

0 Categories : Blog
Mar
21

New Hope Digital Coming Soon!

by Andrea Mullins

In case you missed the exciting announcement that New Hope Digital is coming in mid April, here is our press release. Visit the link and sign up to receive more information as well as our newsletter.

(Birmingham, Ala.)—March 9, 2011—As book publishing rapidly enters an exciting new era of connectivity, New Hope Publishers is pleased to announce the upcoming launch of NewHopeDigital.com this April. NewHopeDigital.com is an innovative Web venture, providing readers and retailers with fresh content from top authors in multiple digital formats.

NewHopeDigital.com will feature regularly updated magazine-style content—articles, columns, feature stories, podcasts, videos—from New Hope authors and other contributors. In addition to featuring the latest book releases, each month the site will have a specific theme, such as orphan care, human exploitation, the persecuted church, and missional living.

“New Hope authors are making an impact for Christ, and through New Hope Digital, readers and retailers will be able to read, listen, watch, and interact with them regarding relevant, contemporary issues all in one place,” says publisher Andrea Mullins. “We are praying that our unique approach will be transformational in the lives of believers and will be a tool that retailers can use to connect their customers to the books that will be most helpful in their spiritual journeys.”

The New Hope fold of authors has been very receptive to the concept. “NewHopeDigital.com will provide me an opportunity to go deeper and connect with readers and retailers in an exciting new venue,” says top-selling New Hope author Jennifer Kennedy Dean, best known for her Live a Praying Life resources. “Since most of us live a cyberlife, NewHopeDigital.com fits right into the flow of information that I value and look forward to.”

New Hope author Mark Russell (The Missional Entrepreneur) says, “The church needs a place to explore complex human issues, discover the comprehensive vision of God’s mission, and how these two realities can come together. I’m excited about New Hope Digital because it gives us a conversation space to learn from one another in our God-given mandate to love him and our global neighbor.”

To find out more and to sign up for a free monthly e-newsletter and receive a free download of iFaith by Daniel Darling on the Nook platform, please visit the promotional site at NewHopeDigital.com today.

0 Categories : Blog
Feb
20

My Grandfather Was a Slave

by Andrea Mullins

by Joyce Dinkins

Most people are amazed when I tell them my grandfather was a slave.

I was discussing my granddad’s generation with a co-worker. “I can’t imagine how slaves, sharecroppers . . . could endure everything that happened to them. How do people in horrible, degrading, dehumanizing situations retain the will to live?” were her questions. My answer comes from a lifetime of learning to look back, understand, and appreciate from where we’ve come.

I’ve never seen Millard F. Wheeler’s face but remember this description: he was a smaller, broken-toothed and quiet, humble man with special gifts. My dad characterized him, “one of the most honest of poor folks, even when it hurt. He was really hurt by slavery because he had such free desires he never got to exercise.” One favorite recollection is that granddad was in charge of tending the fireplaces that warmed his brother’s church before Sunday School (some of those churches are refurbished historical sites in northern Georgia).

Pondering our oral history since childhood has ingrained granddad in my memory. Though, much African-American history has been acknowledged broadly only recently with February commemorations. Some want to forget; I don’t. Knowing about and understanding people who have survived degradation yields rich answers.

Their lives speak precious truth to answer that “How?” The power my granddad and others had—faith—to survive, thrive, and encourage others with hope is a miracle from God. Longing to know them and understand their lifestyle, times, and endurance has been a catalyst for me to consider Him, in whom they trusted to deliver us.

When the Civil War officially began 150 years ago, in the spring, my grandfather and his brothers and sisters were youth longing for freedom. George Washington Wheeler (GW), the oldest of my grandfather’s siblings was an abolitionist, preacher, and a church planter. He stole his masters’ horses to carry the message of faith in a free future above bowed-down heads in Georgia’s cotton fields where he, his parents, brothers, sisters, and extended family of slaves toiled.

Not quite 40 years after emancipation, the US 12th census lists my grandfather, his wife, and nine of his children, tied to the land as sharecroppers. My father, born at the turn of the 20th century, became one of three more children working the fields. Dad also labored as a saddle maker, cook, chauffeur, butler, babysitter, and killer of wild dogs. Until he hitchhiked north to domestic work in the Chicago suburbs along with my mother. That’s where I was born a Negro, the youngest of my father’s eight offspring, far from yet close to their Georgian servitude.

I’m quite removed from much of what my great grandparents, grandparents, and parents survived. But their lives tell me what they discovered and retained about how to overcome. My experiences—and their stories—provoke me to faith. Nothing but the grace of God gives us our exceptional testimony.


Joyce Dinkins is the managing editor of New Hope Publishers, Birmingham, Alabama.

0 Categories : Articles
Dec
14

The Gift of Hope and a Free Book

by Andrea Mullins

Our hope is in Christ. His coming is the reason we celebrate Christmas. Hope includes anticipation. Anticipation is one of the pleasures as we wait for the day when we gather with others to rejoice in the Good News.

New Hope is celebrating our hope in Christ and because of this we will be drawing names each day from those who post a comment about one of the books included in the New Hope Sampler. Which sampling did you read today? How did it speak to you?

If you are finding it hard to have hope this season, Brenda Poinsett has written an excellent book that you’ll find encouraging during these days. Can Martha Have a Merry Christmas? is written for those who find that the Christmas season can often be a time of great stress and pressure, and for those who feel the weight of expectation for a “perfect” holiday from the many internal and external influences in their lives.

Today may our hope be in Christ. He alone can lift our spirits as we are reminded of why He came and what His coming means in our lives.

0 Categories : Blog
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Latest News

  • Author Kathy Howard to Speak at 2012 Bible Study Expo
  • Mary Snyder to Kick Off Great Girlfriend Adventure
  • Rick Morton to Speak at kNOw More Orphans Conference
  • New Hope Publishers Recognizes Human Trafficking Awareness Day on January 11
  • New Hope Publishers Books Now Available for the Nook

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