Overview

This is the story you never heard. Jim Elliot got all the headlines from Ecuador in the 1950s, but Frank Drown took similar risks and survived. Just south of where Elliot and his four friends were martyred at the spears of the Waordani, Drown dared to introduce the gospel to Atshuara head-shrinkers with guns. Nate Saint and Roj Youderian who died alongside Elliot were originally Drown’s coworkers and played a vital role in introducing the gospel to these unreached people. Like with the Waordani, many Atshuaras eventually came to Christ.

This account could have been quite sensational. Yet, Drown writes in an understated way. The first few chapters give no hint of the drama that later unfolds in the book. Drown just tells what happened as if anyone might take a canoe over class-five rapids into headhunter territory alongside known murders. He simply recounts leading the team to rescue Elliot, Saint, Youderian, and their team and then conducting their funerals on that lonely beach in the jungle. Yet this humility lends gravity to the work God does through Drown and his wife in this book. You might be tempted to put the book down after the fifty pages. Keep going. It’s well worth it.

Other Sources

Frank Drown will be highlighted in my upcoming missions devotional, Daring Decision. Find out more at www.mrconrad.net.