Q.1
An Oxford graduate lawyer, he flew with the 'Dam Busters' squadron, was the RAF's youngest ever Group Captain, won the VC (and other decorations) and had had a somewhat untidy private life, before renouncing any involvement in armed conflict (after observing the Nagasaki atom bomb), converting to Catholicism and devoting himself to charitable causes, in particular the founding of residential homes for the disabled. Who was he?
  • Leonard Cheshire
  • Guy Gibson
  • Paul Brickhill
  • Douglas Bader
Q.2
At time of writing of this Quiz (late May 2014) the world has just lost one of its most characterful Christians, a black American who came to faith after several picaresque younger years, during which she worked in the performing arts, in the 'sex industry' and plenty besides. Among her many later writings is the plain verse testimony: "When I say..."I am a Christian" I don't speak of this with pride I'm confessing that I stumble and need CHRIST to be my guide." Who was this remarkable lady?
  • Michelle Obama
  • Maya Angelou
  • Billie-Jean King
  • Whoopi Goldberg
Q.3
Brother Andrew published his co-written autobiography in the 1960s, entitled . What had he been smuggling; where to (or from), and why?
  • Christian believers out of China, where they were being persecuted
  • Bibles and other Christian literature into the Communist countries of Eastern Europe, where these were not allowed
  • Christian converts away from Islamic states
  • Money into Africa, to help funding the building of new churches
Q.4
Richard Wurmbrand was a pastor of Jewish descent, who was tortured by the Communists in his native country when he stood up for Christianity (the faith he had by then taken). In order to exercise his mind and retain his sanity during years of solitary confinement in a sound-deadened cell, he would compose sermons which he remembered, wrote out and published after his eventual release. He and his wife settled in the West and he died inWhich country had been his original homeland?
  • Romania
  • Hungary
  • East Germany
  • Latvia
Q.5
In 1634 the villagers of a small community in the Tyrol vowed to God that if they were spared from a plague pandemic, they would perform, every ten years and forever, a public dramatic version of the events of Jesus' final days and Resurrection, by way of thanking Him for His intervention. The performances have been regularly staged ever since on that basis, except during World War 2, and with extra runs to mark significant anniversaries of the vow. What is the performance usually known as in English?
  • The Sound of Music
  • The Oberammergau Passion Play
  • Silent Night on the Mount of Olives
  • The Conqueror of Death
Q.6
Joni Eareckson Tada (b.1949) suffered a major personal setback as a teenager which went on to inspire and shape her extensive Christian ministry as a writer, artist, speaker and musician. What was the nature of her life-changing experience?
  • A car crash
  • Poliomyelitis
  • A diving accident
  • The loss of both parents in a random shooting incident
Q.7
This eccentric 19th-century vicar of Morwenstow (in Cornwall) took responsibility for giving a decent Christian burial to the bodies washed ashore from ships destroyed by the activities of the Wreckers. In 1843 he held the first Harvest Festival, which has since become an almost universal autumn service in the weeks shortly before when we now mark Remembrance. What was his name?
  • John Keble
  • Robert Hawker
  • Edward Pusey
  • John Newman
Q.8
The famous 1981 film tells the story of a devout Scots athlete who refused to run in the 1924 Olympics on a Sunday (the Sabbath, in his terms). What was his name?
  • Nigel Havers
  • David Puttnam
  • Harold Abrahams
  • Eric Liddell
Q.9
In 1987 the Archbishop of Canterbury's Special Envoy to the Middle East was himself taken hostage while seeking the release of other individuals held by terrorists in the Lebanon; he emerged from captivity at the end of 1991 after 1,763 days and nights (during which, besides much else, communism had collapsed across eastern Europe). Who was he?
  • Robert Runcie
  • John McCarthy
  • Terry Waite
  • Simon Weston
Q.10
Born the son of slaves in 1864, as a black person he received no formal education until the age of 30, yet the wise use of his gifts under God brought huge benefit to others, such as the crop rotation system and the development of several important everyday derivatives of the peanut plant. He lived right through to 1943 by which stage magazine had hailed him as a 'black Leonardo'. Who was he?
  • Martin Luther King
  • Harry Burleigh
  • George Washington Carver
  • Lincoln Harris
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