Dear Phyllis, November
30, 2014
Last Tuesday we were invited to attend the75th anniversary of
Global Recordings and the 15th anniversary of its being in Thailand . Gospel Recording (the original name)
was started in 1939 by Joy Ridderhof. Joe Carroll used to say, he wondered why
most of the great men of God that he knew were women. Joy Ridderhof was
certainly one of the greatest female men of God of our time. She started an
organization that has undoubtedly reached a wider spectrum of people with the
Gospel than any organization in history.
Joy first went out as a missionary to Honduras in 1930. She contracted Malaria and was
forced to return to the states. Being unable to get back to the mission field,
she had a great burden how to reach the souls in Honduras that were dear to her. The movie
industry and recording industry was just expanding in the 1930s and she learned
of a studio near her home in Los Angels that would make recordings for
individuals. She invested her life savings of about $25 to make a recording of
the Gospel to send back to Honduras to play to her friends that they might
get saved. It was through this initial investment that she got the vision of
making recording in different languages to be a means of witnessing to people
in difficult areas, that otherwise had no chance of hearing the Gospel.
I first met Joy when I was with Joe for their annual Bible
conference in Los Angeles in 1964, and later became a reasonably
close friend. I was sitting with her one night on the porch of her home that
was very close to the center of downtown Los Angeles and asked her, “How did you ever get
this place?” She said that was her fathers farm. Her father's farm was what is
now the center of Los Angeles , and that was the headquarters for
Gospel Recordings.
From the original concept of making records on 72 RPM black disks, the technology of
recordings evolved in some ingenious ways. If they wanted to reach unreached
tribes in remote places on the earth, they had to have some means of being able
to play these recordings on something different than a phonograph or a record
player. It is pretty hard to buy batteries in the heart of the Amazon or the
Tibetan plateau so they had to have something non-electrical.
The simplest means was what they called the talking card. It was
nothing more than a piece of cardboard folded in thirds. There were no wires or
anything electrical in it. On the bottom third there was a small pin (post)
where you could place a record. You stood the rest of the card board up like a
tepee with a small needle on the end of one side. You could place that needle
on the record and spin it with your finger and it would talk to you. The one
side of the card board acted as the speaker. You could pack hundreds of these
cards with records in a box, carry them in the heart of the jungles, and naked
savages could hear the Gospel in their own tongue. That would so intrigue them
that they would spin those records listening to the Gospel by the hour.
They had another high tech device that was no less ingenious but
bulkier to carry. They had a small wooden box with a turntable on it. Inside
was a simple gear mechanism that you turned with a crank on the side. There was
a fly-wheel inside that regulated the RPM of the turntable. No matter how fast
you turned the crank the speed was always the same. On top of the box there was
a arm that was very similar to the original gramophones. On the end of the arm
there was a small speaker with a needle on the end. As you turned the record,
the needle would make the paper speaker vibrate that would produce the sound.
You could hear the recording quite clearly. In remote villages these talking
boxes were tremendously popular as people would listen to the Gospel in their
own native language by the hour.
Producing the records was the trick. This required an army of
courageous missionaries. A recordist missionary would go into an area that was
totally unreached by the Gospel and locate someone who was bilingual in both
the language of the recording and the tribe they wanted to reach. The recordist
had prepared scripts of messages he wanted to record. He would have the native
speaker read those scrips and record what he was saying. There were a number of
messages that they would record ranging from the story of sin, the Cross, the
resurrection, coming judgment, creation, the Flood, etc. The recordist would
get these messages recorded in the language he was targeting on a portable tape
recorder. He would send that tape back to Los Angeles where technicians would take it off the
tapes and make records out of them. The records were very simple plastic disks
made by volunteers in Los Angeles that would get shipped back to the
country targeted. Missionaries could then carry those records and the talking
cards or boxes into remote areas where these tribes or minority groups lived
and distribute them. The natives were delighted to have these miraculous
talking gadgets and play the records to hundreds of people by the hour. To date
Gospel Recordings (Global Recording) has reached over 6,000 tribes with the
Gospel message. Can you imagine that? The Lord alone knows how many million
have been saved through these simple records.
Of course, church planting and lasting evangelism is much more
involved. Mission organizations, like Wycliffe Bible
Translators, and New Tribes Mission, send in missionaries who reduce the native
language to writing, then translate the Bible in that language. From there
Bible are printed and serious, evangelism, and discipling takes over. All of
that is necessary to get the Gospel to the nations of the world. But for those
small tribes and unreached areas where the population is too small to print
Bibles, this is about the only way of getting that message to those people.
Joy Ridderhof was an amazing woman of God. GR has carried the
Gospel far beyond anything that we could have imagined. Let's do our part in
telling our neighbors who speak our language about the wonderful salvation of
our Lord Jesus.
bill