Small Beginnings
One day, when you do tell your story, even in a manuscript, always use God’s Word.
Guest (Female): Welcome to Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope. I often hear people ask, "Joni, how do I get my story published?" Well, here she is with the answer.
Joni Eareckson Tada: It's a pretty common question. People will tell me that they've been working on a manuscript of their testimony, and they want to know how to get it printed. I try to answer that as best as I can, but to be honest, years ago, I did not approach a publisher. Let me tell you how it happened.
My journey with book writing began back in 1974 when my artwork—things I created using a mouth stick—caught the attention of a local TV station in my hometown of Baltimore. They did a short feature about my paintings, and that local TV interview caught the attention of a producer at NBC's The Today Show in New York. At his invitation, my sister and I loaded up my artwork in the back of her station wagon, and we drove up to New York City to be interviewed by Barbara Walters. She was kind of the Kelly Ripa of her day.
When on national television, I was asked about my smile, I told America, "It's all because of Jesus Christ, my Savior. I'd be hopeless without him." After that, things just exploded. A publisher who had been watching asked me to write a book. When the Joni book was released in 1976, I began getting letters. One of those letters was from the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.
Apparently, Ruth Graham had read the Joni book, and she suggested that I should share my story on several Billy Graham Crusades, which I did. Then the Billy Graham people asked me if I'd be willing to play my own part in a film about my story. What an experience that was! Should you wonder, there will be no Joni 2, no Son of Joni, no Joni's Revenge. That one film experience was enough.
As you would guess, the movie brought even more mail to my door, and many of those letters were from people with disabilities like me. That's when I realized that I needed more than just a few friends around the kitchen table to help me to respond. So in 1979, I began Joni and Friends. It's hard to believe that a worldwide ministry got started through a few mouth sketches drawn by a 20-something girl in a wheelchair.
To this day, nobody is more surprised than I am. Taking wheelchairs around the world, holding retreats for special needs families in the States and in places like Peru, Thailand, and Ukraine. God is doing huge things from such small beginnings. But isn't that just how God works? The Lord delights in doing big things through humble beginnings.
Consider when he took Gideon's army and whittled it down to 300 men before they took on the military machine of the Midianites. He used a farm kid tending sheep to bring down a mighty giant, Goliath. He chose a man with no children to be the father of many nations. And God picked me, a young girl in her early 20s still struggling to find her way in a wheelchair. God picked me back then to reach thousands of people with disabilities around the world.
So what about that question, "How do I get my book published?" My answer: I say leave it to God. You focus on deepening your message, and let your faithful Lord focus on spreading that message. One bit of advice, though: when you do tell your story, even in a manuscript, always use God's Word because neither your story nor mine can transform the hearts of readers. Only God's Word can do that, and you can take that to any publisher.
Guest (Female): Friend, one more thing. We here at Joni and Friends would love to pray for you and your hardships. So share your prayer needs with us today at joniradio.org. Again, that's joniradio.org.
Featured Offer
Ken and Joni offer readers a rare and candid account of their journey through quadriplegia, depression, pain, and cancer—and reveal a hope founded on God’s grace alone. This month they’re celebrating 44 years of marriage! Let their story inspire and encourage your own life and marriage!
Featured Offer
Ken and Joni offer readers a rare and candid account of their journey through quadriplegia, depression, pain, and cancer—and reveal a hope founded on God’s grace alone. This month they’re celebrating 44 years of marriage! Let their story inspire and encourage your own life and marriage!
About Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope
Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope is a broadcast ministry of Joni and Friends committed to bringing the Gospel and practical help to people impacted by disability around the world. Joni and Friends has been advancing disability ministry for over 40 years. Their mission to glorify God, communicate the Gospel and mobilize the global church to evangelize, disciple and serve people living with disability answers the call found in Luke 14 to “bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame… so that my house will be full.”
About Joni Eareckson Tada
Joni Eareckson Tada is an esteemed Christian stateswoman and respected global leader in disability advocacy. Although a 1967 diving accident left her a quadriplegic, she emerged from rehabilitation with a determination to help others with similar disabilities. Mrs. Tada serves as CEO of Joni and Friends, a Christian organization which provides programs and services for thousands of special-needs families around the world. President Reagan appointed Mrs. Tada to the National Council on Disability, then reappointed by President George H.W. Bush. During her tenure, the ADA was passed and signed into law. Mrs. Tada served as advisor to Condoleezza Rice on the Disability Advisory Committee to the U.S. State Department. She served as Senior Associate for Disability Concerns for the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization. The Colson Center on Christian Worldview awarded Joni Tada its prestigious William Wilberforce Award, and she was also inducted into
Indiana Wesleyan University’s Society of World Changers.
Joni Eareckson Tada has been awarded several honorary degrees, including Doctor of Humanities from Gordon College and Doctor of Divinity from Westminster Theological Seminary. She is an effective communicator, sharing her inspirational message in books, through artwork, radio, and other media. Joni Tada served as General Editor of the Beyond Suffering Bible, a special edition published by Tyndale for people affected by disability. Joni and her husband Ken were married in 1982 and reside in Calabasas, California.
Contact Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope with Joni Eareckson Tada
Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope
PO Box 3333
Agoura Hills, CA 91376-3333
818-707-5664