Advance Orders for Limited Printing. Release Date: August 1, 2022
Ted Byfield, the driving force behind the creation of our best-selling history book series The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years passed away just before Christmas on December 23, 2021.
For the last five years leading up to his death, acclaimed author Jonathon Van Maren personally interviewed both Ted and many of the people involved in his remarkable life.
Byfield first founded three Christian boys schools across Canada that became famous for their tough, voyageur-style education program that involved young boys canoeing hundreds of miles each school year on rivers reaching the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans.
Byfield then switched gears back to news reporting, and his popular newsmagazines rose up in Canada’s west to become the dominant voice protesting a nation bent on wrecking itself by stoking both secularism and separatism.
To reserve your copy of the remarkable life recorded in this limited first edition hard-cover press run simply click on the image to the left or on the link below:
Two Thousand Years.
Twelve Volumes.
One Story.
Who is the story about?
Following the cruel execution of their teacher a small band of followers set forth in motion a new way of living and loving that has rocked the entire world. They call themselves the ‘Christians’ and this is the story of what they have accomplished over the last two thousand years.
The Trial of Jesus of Nazareth by the Sanhedrin. [Image is from Chapter 1: ‘Madman or God’ of Volume 1: ‘The Veil is Torn’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
Who is the story about?
The Trial of Jesus of Nazareth by the Sanhedrin. [Image is from Chapter 1: ‘Madman or God’ of Volume 1: ‘The Veil is Torn’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
Following the cruel execution of their teacher a small band of followers set forth in motion a new way of living and loving that has rocked the entire world. They call themselves the ‘Christians’ and this is the story of what they have accomplished over the last two thousand years.
What do they cover?
Battle of Milvian Bridge (AD 312) where soldiers first fought with shields emblazoned with the Christian ‘Chi-Rho’ symbol and won. [Image is from Chapter 5 of Volume 3: ‘By This Sign’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
What do they cover?
Battle of Milvian Bridge (AD 312) where soldiers first fought with shields emblazoned with the Christian ‘Chi-Rho’ symbol and won. [Image is from Chapter 5 of Volume 3: ‘By This Sign’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
Those who call themselves Christian have since ventured into every nation and every role of man from lowly to high. ‘The Christians’ history series invites you to journey with them. Experience their triumphs, but note also the tragedies. Future generations learn from both.
Where does the story go?
Clapped in chains following his brutal behavior in Hispaniola, Columbus chose to continue wearing them on the voyage home to Spain (as portrayed in this nineteenth-century painting by Delleani Lorenzo) to make a point.[Image is from Chapter 9: ‘Ambition versus faith: the conflicted visionary who discovered America’ of Volume 8: ‘The Renaissance: God in Man’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
Where does the story go?
Clapped in chains following his brutal behavior in Hispaniola, Columbus chose to continue wearing them on the voyage home to Spain (as portrayed in this nineteenth-century painting by Delleani Lorenzo) to make a point.[Image is from Chapter 9: ‘Ambition versus faith: the conflicted visionary who discovered America’ of Volume 8: ‘The Renaissance: God in Man’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
When does the story end?
Hundreds of thousands of people attend an all-night Pentecostal service held by the Redeemed Church of Christ on a highway in Lagos, Nigeria in October 2003. Because the congregations are so large, the services are often held outdoors in airplane hangars, although more recently megachurches, such as the fifty-thousand-seat Faith Tabernacle built by Bishop David Oyedepo have been built to accomodate the throngs. [Image is from Chapter 20 of Volume 12: ‘The High Tide and the Turn’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
When does the story end?
Hundreds of thousands of people attend an all-night Pentecostal service held by the Redeemed Church of Christ on a highway in Lagos, Nigeria in October 2003. Because the congregations are so large, the services are often held outdoors in airplane hangars, although more recently megachurches, such as the fifty-thousand-seat Faith Tabernacle built by Bishop David Oyedepo have been built to accomodate the throngs. [Image is from Chapter 20 of Volume 12: ‘The High Tide and the Turn’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
Why were these books created?
Over the past two millennia medical and other scientific discoveries by Christians — along with a desire to defend human dignity — have yielded better health and prosperity for all. Nevertheless, the Bible warns that our past repeats itself [Ecclesiastes 1:9]. Vigilantly remembering our Christian heritage serves to protect these benefits.
From a late 19th-century edition of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, young Eva is shown reading the Bible to slave Tom. Beecher Stowe’s book was the second-best-selling book in the nineteenth century, after the Bible. [Image is from Chapter 5 of Volume 11: ‘Unto the Ends of the Earth’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]
Why were these books created?
Over the past two millennia medical and other scientific discoveries by Christians — along with a desire to defend human dignity — have yielded better health and prosperity for all. Nevertheless, the Bible warns that our past repeats itself [Ecclesiastes 1:9]. Vigilantly remembering our Christian heritage serves to protect these benefits.
From a late 19th-century edition of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, young Eva is shown reading the Bible to slave Tom. Beecher Stowe’s book was the second-best-selling book in the nineteenth century, after the Bible. [Image is from Chapter 5 of Volume 11: ‘Unto the Ends of the Earth’ of ‘The Christians: Their First Two Thousand Years’ history book series.]