About the Author:
Stan Sager graduated with a bachelor's degree in zoology from the University of Kansas. He served as a communications and operations officer in the U.S. Navy during the Korean war and later earned a law degree from Washburn University of Topeka, Topeka, Kansas. As an attorney in Albuquerque, New Mexico, he founded and grew his own firm to one of New Mexico's largest. Sager served as a member of the New Mexico Board of Bar Commissioners and co-chaired various task forces that addressed the legal needs of New Mexico's poor. His work earned hiim the New Mexico state bar's LaFollette Pro Bono Award, the Professionalism Award, and other honors. He served the New Mexico Annual Conference of The United Methodist Church as chancellor and as treasurer of its foundation. He was a member of the board of the United Methodism's General Council on Finance and Administration. He led New Mexico's lay delegation to General Conference three times. Sager was elected to chair the General Conference Legislative Committee on Financial Administration, chaired the Committee on Audit and Review, and authored or co-authored many fiscal policies of the denomination as well as a booklet on internal audit and control, and a revised version of the "Local Church Audit Guide." He received the Judge Woodrow B. Seals Award from the Perkins School of Theology, Dallas, for his work with the poor and his leadership in restructuring the financial reporting system of the denomination. Stan Sager lives in Albuquerque with his wife, Shirley.
Review:
Stan Sager has written a perceptive, thorough, and moving history of the Four Corners Native American Ministry. He is on target when he writes that Navajo United Methodist Christians give up a lot, but they are convinced that they gain much more when they accept Jesus Christ as their Savior. This book is a must read for a wide audience, especially those affiliated with The United Methodist Church. --Alfred L. Norris, Bishop, The Dallas Area, The United Methodist Church
Holy Spirit inspired and directed, the Four Corners Native American Ministry is an amazing and powerful story of the work of God among a little known and understood native American people. In the dusty, distant, open spaces of the desert Southwest, God is transforming lives. --Mark L. Dorff, Retired Conference Council Director and Albuquerque District Superintendent, New Mexico Annual Conference of The United Methodist Church
Four Corners tells the vital, courageous story of ordinary people, transformed by the power of the Holy Spirit, who accomplish extraordinary mission and ministry. The people are the Navajo; the ministry is Four Corners. . . . a powerful reminder that when God dwells in and through us, miracles take place. --Julia Kuhn Wallace, Director of Small Church and Shared Ministries, General Board of Discipleship of The United Methodist Church
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