David Brainerdâs missionary efforts among the Native Americans of colonial North America are legendary, largely due to Jonathan Edwardsâs Account of the Life of the Late Rev. David Brainerd. But how many people know that Davidâs brother John devoted decades of his life to continue this mission? Mack Tomlinson tells the inspiring story of the Brainerd brothersâ unconquerable faith in God and how their relentless mission work accomplished more for Native Americans than any other individual or organization at that time. This is a vivid reminder that there are no limits to what God can do when His peopleâs hearts are wholly devoted to the service of Jesus Christ!
168 pages.
Â
Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Introduction
Brainerd Timeline
- A Legacy Begins
- Yale College and the Brainerd Brothers
- David Brainerd and Indian Missions
- A Day of Godâs Power: The Crossweeksung Indian Mission
- The Earthly End of a Significant Life
- The Bethel Mission
- The Brotherton Mission
- John Brainerdâs Journal
- In Life and Death: John Brainerdâs Final Years
Appendix 1: John Brainerdâs Gospel Response to the Indian Theory of Race
Appendix 2: David Brainerdâs Flawed View of Himself
Appendix 3: David Brainerdâs Personal Musings
Appendix 4: Brainerd Doctrine and Preaching
Appendix 5: Indian Evangelism
Appendix 6: Gospel-Driven Suffering
Appendix 7: The Brainerd Legacy
Â
âMack Tomlinsonâs biography of David and John Brainerd is a must read for every Christian. This brief but beautifully crafted work is more than a complement to the Diary of David Brainerd. It stands on its own as a wonderful account of the providence and power of God in the lives and ministry of two brothers who changed the world. Like his more distinguished brother David, John Brainerdâs reliance on the Word and prayer and his unreserved self-sacrifice serve as an example and pattern to be imitated by all who would serve Christ. In a day of strategic self-promotion, John Brainerdâs life is a rebuke and reminder of all that God can accomplish through even the weakest vessel when self is crucified, Christ is glorified, and eternity remains in focus. If you are a young aspirant to the ministry, set out early on the same path of devotion and self-denial that was trod by John and David Brainerd. This little book will be a helpful guide to start you on that costly road and encourage you to remain on it.â
âPaul Washer, founder of HeartCry Missionary Society
âWe all know of David Brainerd. I read his life early in my ministry and discovered there was no one equal for fervor and prayer. I wanted to be like him. But I knew nothing about his brother John, who faithfully protracted Davidâs brief work with equal sacrifice among the Indians of New Jersey for thirty-four years in the mid to late 1700s. Recapturing the story of the beloved David first, the author unveils the forgotten John Brainerd, a like soul to his brother. The initial flare of Davidâs short but inimitable ministry burned as a steady flame in the perseverance of John. âHe lives in tradition by the wigwam fires of the far West Indiansââsaid Thomas Brainerd in 1865, referring to the land to which Johnâs sheep were removed. âHe is worthy also to live in the literature of the church.ââ
âJim Elliff, Christian Communicators Worldwide, Kansas City, Missouri
âMack Tomlinson has produced an excellent investigation of the Brainerd brothers, David and John, and their joint labors for the conversion of the Native Americans. Their personal self-denying devotion to the cause of the gospel among these neglected people is one of the most inspiring and at the same time convicting sagas of American history. They illustrated the words of Jesus, âWhoever loses his life for My sake and the gospelâs will save itâ (Mark 8:35). Tomlinson gives a sensitive picture of their love and admiration for each other and their shared devotion to their call for evangelism. Incorporating numerous primary source references into the main text itself, the author also has included several appendices that supplement the story and also give honest evaluation of the spiritual lives of these admirable witnesses for Christ.â
âTom Nettles, senior professor of historical theology, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Kentucky
Indomitable Brainerds, The: The Gospel Legacy of David and John Brainerdâs Mission to the Indians is in the following collections: