"What a view! Have you ever seen anything as beautiful as these mountains? How can anyone see all this and not believe in God?"
"Which way will you choose, my friends? One way offers wealth and luxury, but no hope of eternal life. The other is hard, but leads at last to a golden city with joys forevermore."
A rich, moving, true story. An encouraging, triumphant journey about how the Bible came to Tibet, taking ninety years in total. An amazing tale telling how this group of people were ready to do anything to spread the truth of Jesus and what He did for us. And they did endure awful hardships...............I am truly inspired.
This book recounts the 90-year story of the making of the first Tibetan Bible, center-staging the Tibetans who worked on the translation rather than the Western missionaries alone. I read it in a day — it’s riveting and concise. A must-read in missions history.
God Spoke Tibetan by Allan Maberly relates the true story of how the Tibetan Bible was created. Beginning as just a vision of two missionaries to Tibet in the late 1800s, the process of translating the Bible in tot he Tibetan language took 90 years to complete. The original translation of the New Testament into the classical Tibetan language turned out to be cumbersome and difficult to understand, and it had to be translated all over again. Satan seemed to work overtime in preventing the translation of Scripture, but God's power eventually won out. The reader is kept entranced by the number of obstacles the translators faced in getting the Bible translated and more so by the way God responded to the prayers of His people. Fascinating read!
Such a beautiful story! I think it could have used a couple more rounds of editing, but the story in itself was incredible and fascinating. God is so good ❤️
Incredible story of Men who persevered though *so* many trials in order to bring the Word of God to the people of Tibet. I will def be keeping it on my shelf for my sons to read one day !
I read this because my daughter has to read it this year, and I liked it much more than I thought I would. I didn't know much about Tibet and that entire region, so I read the book with google maps open, and an occasional google search for terms and items I didn't know well. Even so, I finished this book in less than a day.
The story of how a series of men in a place where there is not even a word for the one true God hear of Jesus and are saved, then determine to translate the Bible and take it back into Tibet. While the process takes far, far longer than anyone expected, and they come against all kinds of obstacles (including many wars and death), I love how, on the last page, the author shines the light of how God's hand directed this in his perfect timing.
The main obstacles for a kid reading this are the same as for most adults: it involves places and names and history and religions that we are probably mostly unfamiliar with. You can read without knowing these and just sort of pick up the general idea as you go along, or you can use it as a launching place to learn more by researching as you read.
I read this with my family as a worship book, and it was quite appropriate for it. The writing could've used some work; the first chapter was vivid, and the visuals practically leapt off the pages, but from there on, it was (unfortunately) mostly "telling" and not "showing." Sadly, that took away a lot of the enjoyment for me.
Still, the story is wonderful and often had us at the edge of our seats with suspense. Even though the title gives away that the Bible is indeed brought to Tibet, sometimes the situations left us wondering just how that would happen. The forces of evil worked very hard in trying to keep the Bible out of a country that thirsted for it so badly, but in the end, God triumphed through the work of His faithful followers.
Overall, this story is a powerful testimony to the lengths God goes to to make sure the whole world knows of His Word before the end of time.
This is a riveting book which chronicles the story of how the Bible was translated into the Tibetan language. It took over a span of 100 years to finish the entire translation. Several wars interrupted the process. God's hand is evident in many of delays that happened. In the end, good wins and over 4,000 Scriptures made their way into Tibet in the early 1980(?)s.
This is an account of how the Bible came to be translated into the Tibetan language. As to that, it is an amazing story that deserves to be recounted. However, this book could use some editing to help with timing and segue issues that could cause confusion to the young reader.
Although the writing could be better, and the story gets a bit choppy in a few places, God Spoke Tibetan, certainly tells a fantastic century-long story of the bible's translation to Tibetan, which I thoroughly enjoyed.
This book has the potential to be great, but the author falls short in clarity and flow. I did enjoy the story of how the Bible was translated into the Tibetan language, but this won’t be one of the books I keep on my bookshelves for re-reading.
I really enjoyed this story. The writing feels fairly simple but it seems fitting. The trials and tragedies in this true story are weighty enough on their own, so dramatic language is unnecessary.
Week one of our homeschool curriculum included this book. This is a story about how the Bible came to be translated and then distributed in Tibet. It took 90 years from start to finish. This illustrates the persistence and faith of so many different people. Bible translation is more than just transcribing the words--it also has to deal with the different cultures and cultural aspects.
The story itself is good, but the writing was, well, very mediocre. There are parts that are good--good story telling and descriptions, followed by long segments of summary, "telling" over "showing".
So this book is more about the story and how the Bible got translated into the Tibetan language and then distributed. To be fair, this book was in the "history" and "Bible" portion of our hs curriculum, and not the "literature" part.
4/5, really 3.5/5. Major points off for the mediocre writing.
A true story about the men who worked to bring the Bible to the Tibetan people. With all sort of set backs and struggles, it took well over forty years to accomplish, but God works in his own time. The dedication and diligence shown by the translators, scribes, and just everyone involved was inspiring. To know that there are believers in Tibet, albeit mostly underground, is a true testament to God’s all-reaching presence and power.
Amazing story, engagingly written. Quite a page-turner. Perhaps a couple small inaccuracies or old-fashioned descriptions (though consistent with the period of the story); still seemed to me worthy of five stars.