Hannah Hurnard

Hannah Hurnard (1905–90) is a 20th-century Christian author, best known for her allegorical novel, Hinds' Feet on High Places.

Biography

Hurnard was born in 1905 in Colchester, England, to Quaker parents. She graduated from Ridgelands Bible College in 1926. In 1932 she became an independent missionary, moving to Haifa, Palestine. Her work in Palestine and later Israel lasted 50 years, although she would later maintain a home in England as well.

Eagles' Wings to the Higher Places has been said to support beliefs in pantheism, universalism, and gnosticism. Unveiled Glory tells of how she came to believe in Universal reconciliation.[1]

Selected bibliography

  • Hinds' Feet on High Places
  • Mountains of Spices
  • God's Transmitters
  • Hearing Heart
  • Fruitarianism: Compassionate Way To Transform Health
  • Garden of the Lord
  • Kingdom of Love
  • Wayfarer in the Land
  • Winged Life
  • Walking Among the Unseen
  • Eagles' Wings to the Higher Places
  • Watchmen on the Walls
  • Steps to the Kingdom
  • Thou Shalt Remember: Lessons of a Lifetime
  • The Unveiled Glory
  • The Way of Healing
  • The Inner Man
  • The Opened Understanding
  • The Heavenly Powers
  • The Mystery of Suffering
  • The Secrets of the Kingdom

References


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