Pastoral Training – ABH https://abhbooks.com Simplified Biblical Training in Bite-Sized Books. Fri, 29 Aug 2025 21:34:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://abhbooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-ABH_Logo_Color_Square_web-1-32x32.jpg Pastoral Training – ABH https://abhbooks.com 32 32 Equals in Marriage and Ministry https://abhbooks.com/2025/08/28/a-marriage-and-ministry-of-equals-stories-from-the-conference/ https://abhbooks.com/2025/08/28/a-marriage-and-ministry-of-equals-stories-from-the-conference/#respond Thu, 28 Aug 2025 13:31:39 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=4734 by Erin Ensinger

Amani always attended ministry conferences without his wife. His denomination invited pastors only, and Naomi didn’t seem interested in his ministry anyway.  At home, Naomi despaired of ever feeling close to Amani. In ten years of marriage, they never spent time together, just the two of them, away from the interruptions of children, house chores, and hectic ministry schedules.

“We simply do not have time for one another,” Naomi summarized their marriage. “We live together but we are not together.”

ABH required pastors to bring their wives, however, to the June 2025 Hope for Marriage Conference in Singida, Tanzania. ABH provided conference guests with four nights in a hotel and three meals each day of the conference— the closest thing to a honeymoon many of these couples had ever enjoyed. In the uninterrupted quiet, Naomi experienced the miracle of forgiving her husband from her heart.

“I was able to extend forgiveness to everyone else who wronged me but when it came to my husband, it was a struggle,” Naomi confessed. “I think I was in so much pain that I did not know how to communicate it to him since we did not have time or knowledge of how to communicate effectively.”

During the conference sessions, ABH speakers taught through the book Hope for Marriage by ABH President Fran Geiger Joslin. Hope for Marriage encourages couples to “build a marriage that preaches” as they learn to forgive one another, partner together as equals, and cultivate attitudes of service and submission. Board President Howard Joslin also taught from his first book in the Bible for Learning series, God’s Perfect World. This book covers Genesis 1-2, including God’s plan for the very first marriage.

Instead of simply hearing about the Bible, Amani and Naomi learned how to study the Bible for themselves. Howard and Fran taught them to ask seven questions about each passage: who? what? why? where? when? how? how many? They practiced searching for repeated terms and action words to discern what the passage reveals about God and how people should respond to him.

“It is not just a marriage conference but the delivery of the materials, read verse by verse, and letting the Scripture speak for itself in a way that every one of us in the conference would see for ourselves,” Amani said of the conference’s impact.

While learning how to study the Bible, Amani and Naomi also witnessed a valuable example of how couples can work together in ministry. They watched Howard and Fran teaching the sessions together as equal partners who submit to one another. Their example ignited Naomi’s desire to serve in the church with Amani by teaching a women’s group.

“This has brought so much life to me and the church at large,” Amani said.

Naomi feels especially determined to help wives who struggle with forgiveness as she did before the conference. She gathered a dozen wives who regularly confide their struggles and taught them the conference material, seeking Amani’s input on their difficult questions.  

Naomi now experiences a new oneness in her marriage as she serves with Amani rather than observing his ministry as an outsider.

“We see the need for a marriage conference at our church,” Naomi said. “We are praying and planning to have one before this year’s end.”

(Names were changed to protect privacy.)

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Biblia ya Kujifunza: A Bible for Learning https://abhbooks.com/2025/04/28/biblia-ya-kujifunza-a-bible-for-learning/ https://abhbooks.com/2025/04/28/biblia-ya-kujifunza-a-bible-for-learning/#respond Mon, 28 Apr 2025 16:29:32 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=4540
by Erin Ensinger
Edward Sabibi ran into an unexpected problem when he began translating the ABH
Study Bible. With no term in Swahili for “study Bible,” he found himself forced to coin the
phrase “Biblia ya Kujifunza” or “Bible for Learning”—the perfect title for a tool that
teaches pastors how to study God’s Word.

Most Tanzanian pastors prepare their sermons with no study notes or commentaries to
guide them. They can’t consult various translations since generally the sole version
available to them is the Swahili Union Bible. According to one scholar, the SUV uses
vocabulary familiar only to highly educated readers. The sentence structure follows the
original languages rather than imitating contemporary Swahili speech. Although the
SUV was updated in 1997, most pastors can only access the 1952 version.

Even pastors fortunate enough to attend Bible college face an uphill climb in unfamiliar
territory.

“I have personally seen during my time in Bible school how pastors from rural areas,
and even some from cities, struggle,” said Sabibi. “They struggle with terminology and
foreign concepts after being brought into a completely new world of theology, especially
with everything being taught in English.”

ABH Board President Howard Joslin aspires to arm pastors with a new translation and
an arsenal of study notes. He chose four qualities to guide his work:

• Accuracy—reflecting theologians’ best understanding of the original authors’ intended meaning. • Simplicity—replacing unfamiliar theological terms with definitions of what the terms actually mean. For example, “three yet one” replaces the term “Trinity.” • Freshness—choosing synonyms so the Bible for Learning reads differently than traditional translations. “Readers naturally pause when they see unexpected words,” Joslin explained. “This enables students to uncover additional details they might have overlooked.” • Consistency—using repeated words in the same way as the original text. Whenever a passage repeats a Hebrew word, the Bible for Learning uses the same word in English and Swahili. This consistency teaches readers to look for the significance of repeated words so they can more accurately interpret the passage. The Bible for Learning also follows a consistent format, laying out the steps a pastor could follow in his own personal Bible study. First Joslin provides a “visual translation,” breaking down each passage with subtitles, bullets, and other markings to allow readers to “see” the structure and emphasis. Then he encourages readers to ask seven crucial questions: “nani? nini? kwa nini? wapi? lini? namna gani? ngapi?” English readers know these questions as “who? what? why? where? when? how? how many?” Close observation forms the foundation of Bible study as readers scrutinize the text to answer the questions. More questions challenge readers to scrutinize their souls: “What does this passage teach me about God?” “How should it change my thinking and behavior?” “Do I really believe what the biblical author wrote?” Heart change, not merely intellectual understanding, fortifies readers with a worthy motive for study. Like ABH’s other books, the Bible for Learning will be printed as a series of bite-sized books, with the first installment— God’s Perfect World: Genesis 1:1-2:25—available this spring. Our Broken World (Genesis 3:1-6:8) and Jesus: God’s Perfect Son (John 1:1- 3:51) continue the story of redemption, supporting pastors in their efforts to teach the gospel. Joslin envisions the Bible for Learning as a team effort. He prays for others to join him in working on translating and creating study notes for individual books of the Bible. “God’s work is always bigger than one person,” Sabibi agreed. “I believe the Bible for Learning is going to bring massive transformation to all those who will embrace it, I
being one.”

 

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The Crucial Need for ABH Mission Trips https://abhbooks.com/2025/03/31/the-crucial-need-for-abh-mission-trips/ https://abhbooks.com/2025/03/31/the-crucial-need-for-abh-mission-trips/#respond Mon, 31 Mar 2025 23:32:13 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=4470 by Fran Geiger Joslin

People sometimes balk at the idea of spending thousands of dollars on a mission trip. Their thinking? $25,000 could feed a lot of hungry people. In our case, we could print a ton of books with the $25,000 it costs for our trip to Tanzania.

It’s true that we could print a lot of books for $25,000, but we travel with bigger goals in mind. We believe printing books and taking mission trips both prove beneficial and productive.

We can, and do, send thousands of books to African countries. Pastor James, our African director in Tanzania, believes that pastors who meet the authors or the people who send them will more likely read and learn from the books they receive. James desires to change the culture from a non-reading society to a reading and learning one. Our visits and conferences help him accomplish that goal.

Rural African pastors typically receive a junior high level of education. They learn to read in school, though they often lack access to books, especially those with biblical content. Limited access to higher education, including Bible college or seminary, leads to less reading overall. We often enjoy the privilege of gifting pastors with their very first book.

Our visits let pastors and their wives know they’re not alone in their struggles. By sharing our own challenges, we show them that even “rich Americans” face problems too. Our stories and experiences encourage them to feel heard and understood.

This May, Howard and I—along with our pastor and another friend—will travel to Tanzania to teach two four-day conferences on the topic of marriage. Tanzania exists as a patriarchal society. Men often treat their wives as property. We will study biblical passages on God’s plan for marriage. We hope to inspire pastors to break cultural barriers by loving their wives like Christ loves the church. We want to convey a balanced perspective of biblical submission and motivate couples to work as a team. James longs to see pastors working together with their wives in ministry.

We plan to model how to closely observe God’s Word in the way we teach. By asking good questions from the passages we study, we challenge couples to find answers in the Scripture. This method of teaching proves effective in teaching the biblical content and how to study the Bible for themselves.   

ABH regularly receives requests for books and teachers. We are building a team of teachers to help us train untrained pastors. We can help these pastors continue growing and learning by sending our teachers once or twice a year. We also gift them with books to encourage them to continue reading and learning on their own throughout the year.

The cost of a mission trip accomplishes much more than just sending a book can accomplish. We believe both work together as a crucial part of training, learning, and growing.

Would you consider helping us embark on this crucial journey where God changes lives?

Click here to give.

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A Big Vision for Small Books https://abhbooks.com/2025/02/25/a-big-vision-for-small-books/ https://abhbooks.com/2025/02/25/a-big-vision-for-small-books/#respond Tue, 25 Feb 2025 21:01:40 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=4420

by Trevor Meers

You need a lot more than efficient shipping to deliver solid biblical training to every corner of the world. Take language alone. Native speakers translate books into their language while editors translate scholars’ words into concepts accessible for the target audience. Sometimes biblical training may even mean dipping into the farming business. At Authenticity Book House’s tenth anniversary dinner, I learned about a ministry that keeps finding ways to bridge any gaps encountered on the way to training ministry leaders.  

I headed to the dinner with both excitement and a question in my mind. I shared ABH’s burden for worldwide theological training. But I also wondered: “Does the world really need another startup Christian publisher?” Every year seems like we may have hit “peak Christian publishing,” but the feeling goes back much further than that. In the stylus-and-scroll days, the writer of Ecclesiastes already noticed that “of making books, there is no end” (Ecc. 12:12). 

But Howard and Fran Joslin didn’t take long to convince me that ABH fills a very real niche ignored by big publishers who need scale to make a profit. Ten years in, ABH proves that thinking small can actually create big results. Key ideas I heard clearly at the anniversary dinner include: 

Clear writing isn’t lesser writing. 

Most ministry books pile on words like “perspicuity” and “immutability” when the writer could just as easily say “clarity” and “unchanging.” Maybe too many pastors (and authors writing for pastors) feel haunted by the thought of an old seminary professor popping up and deducting points for talking too much like a commoner.  

ABH writers aren’t talking to the academic world, so they keep their books simple and actionable. Editors coach writers to speak understandably to a rural pastor who probably has a Bible, a roughly 7th grade education, and little else in terms of training or resources. First, ABH writers produce English sentences that deliver meat-and-potatoes truth for hungry church leaders. Then the translation to Swahili, Spanish, and more begins. 

Smaller travels better. 

A key moment of truth for ABH came when Fran traveled to a major conference and saw herself surrounded by bigger players already doing what she attempted. Then she and Howard found the courage to reimagine ABH’s core offering. The answer lay in realizing that less truly could be more. The team dropped the original concept of regular-size books and started producing pocket-size books. These bite-size books are cheaper to produce, simpler to read, and easier to transport around the world and across borders. ABH landed on a model purpose-built for spreading biblical resources as widely as possible around developing nations.  

Books aren’t always enough. 

Wisdom calls for doing one task well. But sometimes you need to take an extra step before you can even get started on that one task. ABH’s mission is training church leaders. But in Tanzania they realized that people suffering from hunger struggle to study the Bible. So ABH provided a shipment of single-furrow plows that let pastors ramp up their agricultural production from around two acres to seven or more acres. Producing more food in less time gives pastors extra energy and capacity to use ABH books to grow their skills and make disciples.  

My own travels show the clear need for ABH’s work. I’ve worked with church leaders in developing nations on three continents. And in every country, I’ve found leaders with a sincere desire to teach the Bible accurately but almost no training or reference materials to guide them. In ABH, I see a ministry committed to a simple proposition with the potential to transform churches. And with a network of African pastors in place, ABH has the local connections to get their books into the right hands.

ABH convinced me that the world does have a place for another Christian publisher with a very specific target. And I’m looking forward to helping wherever I can.

Trevor Meers serves as a pastor at Lakeside Fellowship in Polk City, IA,
after a previous career as a magazine writer and editor. 

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Plows for Pastors https://abhbooks.com/2025/01/30/plows-for-pastors/ https://abhbooks.com/2025/01/30/plows-for-pastors/#respond Thu, 30 Jan 2025 20:56:53 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=4381 by Erin Ensinger

A Tanzanian pastor faces his family with a grumbling stomach and empty hands. He scrapes together spiritual sustenance for his congregation with no seminary education, commentaries, or study Bible. But his meager salary leaves his table bare at the end of the day.

“They’re going hungry,” Pastor James concluded in a conversation with ABH Board President Howard Joslin.  

This passing comment ignited a vision—not just to offer a few meals, but to purchase plows so pastors can provide a lifetime of meals for their families, churches, and the surrounding villages.

“We live in a farming community,” Howard said. “We could probably raise the money in no time.”

Howard and ABH President Fran Joslin brought the need to their small group at Redeemer Church in Winterset, Iowa. Some church members generously donated $111 each to purchase and deliver a single plow. Meanwhile, a friend longed to contribute. For years, he prayed for an insurance settlement from a car accident, but the insurance company refused to pay. When the money “happened” to come during ABH’s plow campaign, this friend recognized God’s provision and gave $3,100 to help hungry pastors.

In all, ABH raised $4,196—enough to purchase and deliver thirty-four plows—and another $400 to buy seeds. Pastor James personally delivered the plows, dropping off twenty-three plows in a region called Katavi.

“Does the ‘A’ in ‘ABH’ stand for angels?” the presiding bishop in the region joked.

A one-hour meeting with the bishop stretched to four, and then an overnight stay. Later, the bishop called the pastors he oversees, telling them to welcome James who works as ABH’s Africa director, along with ABH’s books.

“Most Americans train but leave pastors hungry,” the bishop explained. “You have saved us by meeting our physical needs first.”  

Next James headed to Singida to deliver the remaining eleven plows. Local pastors hailed James as the “Lifesaver to Pastors” and lavished him with gifts – two chickens and an acre of land. One elderly pastor asked James to be his son because of James’s walk with the Lord.

“The door is open to ABH,” the regional chairman of the Pentecostal Church declared. “You are welcome to come and train as many pastors as you like.”

Before receiving plows, the pastors could cultivate only an acre or two of land. Now they can plant around seven to ten acres, more than enough to feed their families. In three years, the pastors will have grown enough food to last ten years. But these pastors have a greater vision than simply providing for their own needs.

By selling surplus harvest, they plan to buy plows for the church planters they send out to surrounding villages. Then the church planters can raise crops, buy plows, and send out more church planters. As churches multiply, ABH’s scope grows to include more pastors and congregations starving for God’s Word.

“You’re not just training pastors but helping them take care of their families,” James summarized. “The whole region is open now.”

James headed home after delivering plows and experiencing God’s blessing in Katavi and Singida. Around midnight, his car sputtered to a stop by the side of the road. James messaged Fran to pray he could get his car fixed and make it home safely. A local mechanic “happened” to drive the streets in the middle of the night to see if anyone needed help. In less than an hour, God blessed again by sending a mechanic to tow the car, fix it, and send Pastor James on his way.

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Hope in a Refugee Camp https://abhbooks.com/2024/09/26/hope-in-a-refugee-camp/ https://abhbooks.com/2024/09/26/hope-in-a-refugee-camp/#respond Thu, 26 Sep 2024 16:02:16 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=4128 by Erin Ensinger

Sometimes ABH books sprout wings and fly farther than we dared dream. We may never know how a copy of Shepherding God’s Church travelled from Tanzania to Malawi’s Dzaleka Refugee Camp, but Pastor Jacob prays for hundreds more books to follow.

A refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Pastor Jacob is one of over 50,000 people crowded into a camp designed for 10,000. Refugees from Rwanda, Burundi, Ethiopia, and Somalia have called this former political prison home since 1994, according to www.dzaleka.com. The camp sits forty-one kilometers from Lilongwe, Malawi’s capital city, according to unhcr.org.

Five hundred churches also make their home at Dzaleka. But few of the pastors know Scripture or understand their pastoral role. Some participate in adultery. Pastor Jacob possesses a generous vision but few resources to help them.

With a PhD in theology and church planting, Pastor Jacob has already planted the Berea Pentecostal Mission Church in various regions of Malawi. Classes began in September at his Berea Pastoral Training Institute of Africa. He plans to teach—and feed—thirty pastors for free over the next two years. Each pastor will receive a certificate at the end of their training course.

But what is school without books? In a series of text messages, Pastor Jacob pleaded with ABH President Fran Joslin to send books for his students.

 “I have seen your books are very good and can help pastors and church leaders here in Malawi,” Pastor Jacob texted Fran.

Without a printer at the camp, the project of supplying books seemed doomed. Pastor Jacob could ask his students to download the books to their phones—if only they had a good Internet connection. Hope dawned when a pastor in Tanzania offered to get the books printed and send them on the bus route to Dzaleka. He also agreed to make his location in Tanzania a printing hub to send ABH books throughout southern and eastern Africa.

Within days, 250 copies each of Shepherding God’s Church and Discipleship: Following Jesus rode the bus to Malawi. Pastor Jacob announced their arrival with a text to Fran exclaiming, “”Praise the Lord, Fran! I received books. God bless you. I am very grateful.”

Future shipments will include A Walk with the Wounded (a book about pastoral counseling) and Widowed, since Pastor Jacob said many widows live at the camp. He also hopes to use ABH books at a conference this fall for 300 pastors across Malawi.

“Our God is great! We continue to pray for Satan to be defeated in Jesus’ name,” Pastor Jacob concluded in a text to Fran.

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More Than We Can Handle https://abhbooks.com/2023/09/01/more-than-we-can-handle/ https://abhbooks.com/2023/09/01/more-than-we-can-handle/#respond Fri, 01 Sep 2023 02:42:46 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=3579

by Nicole Geiger

Prayer takes place daily at ABH where we regularly ask for expansion. Sometimes it feels as if we move too slowly, receive little support, and come to work with next to no motivation. It’s difficult to trust that we’re making a difference when forward movement seems scarce. At times we struggle not to doubt God’s calling to ministry in the ways we understand.

Over the last few months, however, we can barely keep up with our own answered prayers! Our Administrative Editor currently has two manuscript drafts waiting in line for her attention. More authors interested in writing training material for pastors are stepping forward. We’re in the beginning stages of working with them as they write books of their own. Our own staff is writing three new books we hope to put out by next year. 

This year we published our first book in quite some time. This book (A Walk with the Wounded) teaches church leaders how to emotionally shepherd their churches. We have already given away hundreds of copies of this book, not only to local churches and individuals in the U.S., but also across the globe! A long-time pastor friend of Fran’s (president of ABH) asked for hundreds of our books to give away at a pastors’ conference in Kenya. We were able to help him print 600 books. What a joy it is to do exactly what we’ve been called to do! 

From the very beginning of ABH, Fran and Howard Joslin felt compelled to provide pastors in rural areas of the world with biblical training material to which they wouldn’t otherwise have access. In recent years, between health struggles and the inability to travel on our usual missions trip to Tanzania, our opportunities to serve as we hoped have been limited. We continued to push forward, trusting in Gods timing, and now we often feel like we can’t quite handle the workload! God provided the staffing we needed, donations to continue work, authors for more content, and the ability to provide pastors with much needed biblical training material. 

Nine months into 2023, we feel blessed and thankful to serve the Lord who provides. We are excited to make new contacts and expand our collection of material. We appreciate everyone who prays with us daily. And we thank the Lord for donations that help provide books to those in need. You are an answer to prayer. 

Would you consider donating to help ABH continue providing books to train rural pastors around the world? Click Here.

Or, would you like to join us in ministry by praying regularly for ABH? Click here for our monthly prayer calendar.

 

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Shepherding God’s Church https://abhbooks.com/2023/07/24/shepherding-gods-church/ https://abhbooks.com/2023/07/24/shepherding-gods-church/#respond Mon, 24 Jul 2023 17:25:38 +0000 https://abhbooks.com/?p=3528

“Immanuel touched the pages of his Bible with new respect.
More than ever, he thirsted to fully understand the words of this book.”

by Fran Geiger Joslin

“God is calling you,” urged the older men in the church. Immanuel’s “anxieties rose.” In response to the statement by the older men, his mind filled with doubt and questions. How on earth was he to take over as pastor of his church? He was far too young!

When the missionary came to visit his town, Immanuel saw his need for a savior, and asked Jesus to change him. He began meeting with his pastor every week to study God’s Word with other young people. Then he began visiting the sick and needy alongside his pastor. The next thing he knew, he found himself helping in the church service on Sunday mornings. He loved spending time with his pastor in this way—until everything changed.

Immanuel’s pastor suddenly fell sick and died. Immanuel felt lost. His friend and mentor left him stranded and now the elders of the church want him to take over as pastor! What was he going to do?

Shepherding God’s Church by Jeff VanGoethem chronicles Immanuel’s progression from new believer to disciple, and then to pastor. Like so many pastors in his culture, Immanuel quit going to school at age thirteen. His father needed help tending their animals. Although he loved to learn, he experienced few opportunities to do so.

When the visiting bishop of his church encouraged him to become pastor, he also informed Immanuel that he could learn more in a nearby town. Immanuel attends a class once a week where he learns from the book of Acts about elders, overseers, and shepherds. Additional classes include lessons on devotion to God through prayer and Bible study, as well as what kind of character a pastor should possess.

A good read for anyone wanting to understand the role of a pastor and/or leaders in a church, this book targets rural pastors with minimal opportunity for biblical education. It is literally a first step in understanding pastoral leadership. You will learn along with young Immanuel what it looks like to serve the Lord in ministry.

Author, Jeff VanGoethem, graduated from Dallas Theological Seminary with a ThM degree and later a DMin degree. His continuing forty-year ministry focuses on pastoral work and teaching. During frequent short-term mission trips to East Africa he trains and mentors pastors and church leaders. A former pastor of Scofield Church in Dallas, TX, Dr. VanGoethm serves in his “semi-retirement” as Pastor of Spiritual Development and Missions at East White Oak Bible Church in Carlock, IL.

Pastor Jeff feels passionate about helping young pastors grow in their roles and in their walk with God. He wrote Shepherding God’s Church in story form, as many pastors he mentors come from story-rich cultures.

Pray for Pastor Jeff to find the time in semi-retirement to complete more books in this series. They are desperately needed.

Click here to get the book in English or Swahili. To order large quantities, contact ABH at abhinfo@abhbooks.com.

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