Update February 2015: Joy Ridderhof’s biography became the second in the Potter’s Wheel series of Christian biographies for children. You can see the book here and read a sample chapter here. I’ve written here and here and here and here and I guess especially here about how important I believe it is to give children good examples of Christians who “do exploits” for the Kingdom of God.
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A woman named Joy garnered fame
So different was she from her name.
Vindictive and rude,
Bitter venom she spewed–
But oh Joy! She was never to blame.
(This comes from being in bed with the flu. Sorry.)
That Joy was a woman I knew years ago. I marveled at the disparity between her name and her character. What irony.
This was not Joy Ridderhof. Emphatically not. With the goal of recording every language she could possibly find, Joy Ridderhof persevered with temerity, trekking through jungles and over choppy seas in little boats, energized with a joy that glowed on her face. She knew something about who Jesus Christ was to her, and in her.
I just finished reading Catching Their Talk in a Box, a children’s biography by Betty Hockett about this remarkable lady, and I was impressed, again and again, with how in the face of difficulties, she kept on. Not only trusting God, but trusting to the point of rejoicing. “This is Good Rejoicing Practice,” she would say to her partners at each setback. And there were many. “God must have something better planned for us.”
Good Rejoicing Practice. They began to call it GRP.
Good Rejoicing Practice. When your delicate recording equipment breaks in the middle of a South Sea island. When you miss your plane. Lose your luggage. Get lost in the 120-degree jungle. Never have a husband. Contract malaria.
Good Rejoicing Practice. When you miss what seemed like a door of opportunity. Lose something dear to you. When life seems to shatter. “I will praise You, O Lord! Because You are worthy of praise. And You have something better. I trust You and rejoice in Your goodness. I love You.”
Joy Ridderhof had a simple recipe for the success she experienced in in using primitive equipment to record the gospel message in hundreds of languages. (And establishing a ministry that has gone on to record it in almost six thousand.)
First, Seek God: She told the staff to reserve one entire day for prayer every week!
Then, Trust God. Move forward. At each setback, praise Him, truly praise Him, trust Him, and start fresh.
One more example in that Cloud of Witnesses. One more who did her Small Great part to advance the Kingdom. Praise God for those who have gone before and who, for us who come after, point the way.
***
Go here to download your free Guide, How to Enjoy the Bible Again (when you’re ready) After Spiritual Abuse (without feeling guilty or getting triggered out of your mind). You’ll receive access to both print and audio versions of the Guide (audio read by me). I’m praying it will be helpful.
Hi. I am reading this story via a Trailblazer novel to our Grade 6 – homeschooled daughter. Enjoyed finding your web page on Joy.
Mi familia siempre recuerda a la Señorita Joya, ella fue la misionera que llevo el evangelio a mi familia en Honduras, siempre la recordaremos.
¡Qué hermoso! ¡Alabado sea Dios!
[…] of my missionary books have referenced the work of another woman, Joy Ridderhof, who in fact never married, but instead founded the ministry called Gospel Recordings,which has been of incalculable value to missionaries from the 1940s even to the present […]
[…] of my missionary books have referenced the work of another woman, Joy Ridderhof, who in fact never married, but instead founded the ministry called Gospel Recordings, which has been of incalculable value to missionaries from the 1940s even to the present […]