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Who we are and what we do
Global Recordings Network (formerly known as Language Recordings Inc or Gospel Recordings) is an interdenominational, evangelical, faith-based Christian mission. We are a worldwide network with bases in more than 40 countries. The office of GRN UK is located in Winchester, UK.
We aim to share the truth of God’s word with oral communicators and minority people groups using recordings made in their own languages, that they may become disciples of Jesus Christ.
Find out more about our core beliefs and values here.
We make recordings of basic Bible stories and teachings in thousands of languages. Our ultimate aim is to record every language on the planet for the purposes of evangelism and discipleship. We also produce simple visual and audiovisual resources to help people understand the basics of the Gospel. In addition, we manufacture special purpose playback machines, such as our Saber hand-wind mp3 player, that are nearly indestructible and don’t depend on a power supply.
There are several reasons:
- Hundreds of small people groups have few or no Bibles available in their mother tongue.
- Two thirds of the world’s people are unable to read for understanding.
- Many of these people are part of oral societies, where information is communicated in various oral and dramatic forms and where printed material is not highly valued.
- God promises that there will be people from every nation, tribe and language standing around His throne at the end of Earth’s history.
- God has commanded us to proclaim the Good News to all people and make disciples in all nations.
GRN's History
The ministry of Gospel Recordings was founded in Los Angeles in 1937 by missionary Joy Ridderhof.
In the early 1930s, Joy Ridderhof left the USA to serve as a missionary in Honduras. She worked faithfully there, but the tropical climate and rugged terrain took their toll, and after six years she was invalided home to Los Angeles. Joy lay on her sickbed after returning and felt deep disappointment and sorrow at having to leave her beloved people behind – many of whom were newly saved brothers and sisters in Christ. Most of these people were unable to read or write and relied on verbal messages to bring them to a saving knowledge of Christ.
Joy longed to provide the converts with recorded messages in their native Spanish. In this way, they could be built up in their faith and reach others … after all, “faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.”
Remembering the gramophones she had seen even in the poorest homes, she had an idea. Thanks to the generosity of several friends, Joy was able to create the first 3.5 minute gospel record in Spanish on the last day of 1938, which was soon sent to Honduras.
Other missionaries soon asked Joy to record in the languages in which they were working. So Gospel Recordings was born, and others joined Joy in the work. She was determined it would be a faith mission, relying on the Lord to provide, and she continued to rejoice at all times, even when there were setbacks.
A turning point was reached in 1940. Joy was asked to make a number of gospel recordings for the Navajo Indians in Arizona. Each additional language would lead to requests for more languages to be recorded. She agreed, and so began the fulfilment of the wider Commission – to take the Gospel to the ends of the earth. Although she began with Native American languages, Joy was soon travelling to Mexico, the Philippines, and Africa to make recordings, and in due course other recordists were sent out. Since then, recordings have been made in the languages of virtually every country in the world. Today, GRN has a presence in more than 40 countries.
GRN United Kingdom
The first GRN branch outside the USA was opened in Australia in the early 1950s, but the UK branch began in 1955. Eric Hogg, a Christian businessman who had helped his friend Arthur Gook make a recording in Icelandic for GR, visited Gospel Recordings in the USA while on a business trip. He invited Joy to visit England and promised to arrange meetings for her in London. At the last of these meetings, the formation of the British branch was announced. The Rev. George Scott, Home Director of the CIM (later OMF), became the first chair, and Gilbert Vinden along with Eric and Muriel Hogg were appointed to the Council. Most of the work in the early years was done by Muriel Hogg and Gilbert Vinden, but in 1958 an office and record store were set up in a church basement in London. The first member of staff, Miss Ahier, was appointed, and in 1961 she was joined by the first Executive Secretary, Mr. Merold Stern from South Africa.
One of the UK’s great contributions to GRN worldwide was in technical expertise. Eric Hogg, an electrical engineer, was appointed International Technical Advisor. The UK was also instrumental in the writing of Faith by Hearing, a book about Joy and the work of GRN, authored by Phyllis Thompson of OMF.
David Chapman, who joined as Executive Secretary in 1966, was also a skilled electrical engineer. He moved the work to Ashbury, Wiltshire, setting up a workshop in outbuildings adjoining his home.
In the late 1960s, the UK was offered a high-speed press producing flexible discs, developed in Australia. Once operational, the press produced 200,000 records in its first year. Needing more space, the work moved to Gloucester. However, the flexidiscs were suitable mainly for western countries and not for the remote minority languages that were, and remain, GRN’s greatest priority.
In 1980, it was decided to move flexidisc production into a separate organisation so that GRN could focus on its most important task: making the good news known to small language groups with no missionaries or churches. A new tool, the cassette tape, was by then available to replace records. Cassettes were a great improvement, as they could be made to the needed length and were easier to copy and send out.
In 1987, the Gospel Recordings World Fellowship decided to change its name to Language Recordings, as the original name caused problems for staff working in Muslim countries. The UK Council adopted the new name, which also ended frequent calls from people who assumed GRN would record their Gospel music.
When Dick Greenfield retired in 1987, John and Pat Burman, staff from Canada, were seconded to the UK. After two years they returned to Canada, and Geoffrey Garrick became Director. He persuaded the Board to move from Gloucester to the High Wycombe area, where LRI rented space on the Wycliffe Campus at Stokenchurch. This remained their base until Wycliffe relocated. By then, as cassettes gave way to CDs and DVDs, and later to MP3 players, much of GRN’s work moved online, and large premises were no longer needed.
Eric Hogg, who helped found GRN UK, was appointed International Technical Advisor.
The Rev. George Scott, Home Director of the CIM (later OMF), became the first chair, and Gilbert Vinden along with Eric and Muriel Hogg were appointed to the Council.
Miss Ahier was the first member of staff.
In 1961, Mr. Merold Stern become the first Executive Secretary.
David Chapman joined as Executive Secretary in 1966.
After David Chapman resigned, Dick Greenfield, who had been chair of the UK Council, became acting Executive Secretary, serving in that role for seven years. He retired in 1987.
In 1989, Geoffrey Garrick became Director.
In 1991, a new international organisation uniting all the centres worldwide was formed and named Global Recordings Network. After Geoffrey Garrick moved on in the 1990s, the work was sustained by the Board and volunteers until 1995, when Ed and Judy Young from the USA, who had previously volunteered in the UK from 1969 to 1971, returned and Ed took over as Director.
In 1998, Jim McKechnie, who had been representing GRN in Northern Ireland, became Director in England, and Ed and Judy returned to the USA shortly afterwards. Jim and his wife Irene built on Ed’s work in the UK, and Jim also became Regional Coordinator for Europe. He served on the International Executive Committee, which dealt with issues between meetings of the International Council. After Jim’s heart attack, this international role was taken on by Sally Hogg, Chair of the UK Board, who served until a European Regional Director was appointed in 2019.
In 2007, Jim and Irene retired, and Kenny McKee, who had been working as a recordist with his wife Joan, became Director. Kenny combined the role of Director with that of European recordist, recording a total of 280 languages during his 26 years with GRN. Kenny and Joan’s warmth and enthusiasm made them valued members of GRN worldwide. Kenny was also invited to be part of the team training recordists, where his down-to-earth manner built a bridge between the technical expertise of other trainers and less technically experienced students. Kenny and Joan retired at the end of 2024.
In 2025, the Board welcomed Sanjay Sanil as Centre Leader and GRN UK now looks forward to seeing how the work will develop in the coming years.
Global and Local Impact
We have operational centres and agencies in more than 40 countries. From these bases, recordings have been made in and supplied to virtually every country in the world. Our centres are usually operated by locals. As our priority is to reach people groups that are small and often neglected, we endeavour to go to even the most remote places; “to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8).
After recordings have been made and tested, our teams will often return to the recording location to distribute them and to do whatever else they can to proclaim the good news. Frequently, these teams will work in conjunction with churches, other missions and other missionaries.
The recordings and players are also made available with significant subsidies to missionaries and national churches, pastors and evangelists for them to use in their outreach and discipling ministries.
We encourage our recordists to study the particular needs (spiritual, cultural and linguistic) of each people group and identify the most relevant materials for addressing those needs. This aids us in effectively communicating the Gospel using stories, songs or other means. We aim to provide the most appropriate resources to each people group, and we evaluate previously recorded resources where possible.
Yes! Don’t let language be a barrier. GRN has resources for short-term missions in over 6,000 languages and dialects. They will allow you to share the good news of Jesus in culturally appropriate ways, using local voices, songs and music. Please contact us to learn more about our resources, or to request resources for your mission.
Ask GRN! We will help you find the best resources and most suitable technology for your particular situation.
Languages and Orality
It’s difficult to quantify languages. The Ethnologue (produced by SIL) identifies 6,912 living written languages. However, when dealing with ‘mother tongue’ audio communication, different dialects and other variations of language are counted separately. Even accent can affect the receptivity of a recording. Some estimates put the number of speech forms above 13,000. GRN uses a ballpark figure of 12,000 languages and dialects. We have made recordings in well over 6,000 of these.
It’s still a new word for many, but a vital one for GRN. Every person participates in the world by receiving, understanding, and sharing information. Literacy refers to the written or printed form of this phenomenon. Orality refers to the same, but in other forms. Oral learners are those who best receive and pass on information in non-print forms.
If someone offers you a book or a video, when both contain the same information, which would you choose? Some would choose the book. They are probably ‘literacy preference’ learners. More of us, however, are likely to choose the video. This suggests that even if we are well-educated, we may be ‘oral preference’ learners. This consideration aside, between 50 and 70% of all people in the world do not have the ability to make good use of a Bible because they lack the required skills of reading and/or comprehension.
So, due to both preference and necessity, we must be prepared to incorporate the demands of orality into our evangelism.
Learn more about orality here.
Learn more about storytelling here.
This varies a lot. Some languages we recorded many years ago may only have a small amount of material (e.g. 15-30 minutes), while a few languages may have as much as 15-20 hours’ worth. For a people group with no other resources at all, we often aim to produce 8-10 hours of material over several years. Sometimes, a specific resource is produced for a language where other resources are already available.
Recordings
To explain to people the basic truths of God and the way of salvation, in the language and style that best speaks to their hearts. Our materials are useful for evangelism, basic Bible teaching and discipling.
Our ‘Good News’ and ‘Look, Listen & Live’ presentations have extensive material about Jesus’ life and ministry. ‘The Living Christ’ presentation focuses exclusively on the life and ministry of Jesus. Many scripts in our library focus on some aspect of Jesus’ life and work.
‘Good News’ gives a brief overview of the Scriptures from Creation to Christ. ‘Look, Listen & Live’ presents a more thorough set of Bible stories in a chronological and thematic way from Genesis to Acts. Many of the ‘Words of Life’ messages also relate to this topic.
Yes. Many GRN messages address matters of life and death, salvation, judgement, heaven and hell in various ways. As these materials are primarily designed for oral communicators, the presentation style is mostly not sermon-like. Lessons are taught through stories, following Jesus’ example during His ministry.
Yes, but always with a Biblical foundation and purpose. Appropriate scripts are chosen for each language to deal with specific issues such as sickness, death, fear of evil spirits etc. ‘Good News’ also deals briefly with issues including the Christian family, ‘magic’, the church and witnessing.
We often work in languages where there is no Scripture translated. Where Scripture translations do exist, we may record sections or whole books, normally in partnership with another Bible translation agency. We do not generally record the whole New Testament or Bible.
In oral societies, the Western style of doctrinal teaching is often not the best method. Instead, Bible stories are used to teach about the nature of God, the nature of man, sin, salvation etc. We do not have doctrinal teaching materials in the style of systematic theology.
Yes and no. Programs with the same name, e.g. ‘Good News’, will cover the same material regardless of the language. Reading the English version of a script will give a good idea of what is in the program, but recordists are not encouraged to rigidly translate scripts, as it often results in an awkward sounding message. Scripts are intended to be a foundation for telling the story in another language.
At times, a standard set of scripts is used across different languages, but great care is taken to ensure appropriateness for all of the target groups.
‘Words of Life’ programs usually consist of a series of short messages and songs. Each message runs for about 4 minutes, and a full program for between 30 and 60 minutes. The ‘Good News’ program averages 40-50 minutes, although it’s longer in some languages. Each of the 8 units of ‘Look, Listen & Live’ runs for 35-45 minutes. The full English recording of ‘The Living Christ’ runs for about 2 hours.
The ‘Words of Life’ programs can be stopped after each track, which might be a 3-5 minute message or song. Audiovisual presentations can be paused and discussed after each picture, or after a group of pictures that make up a story – e.g. Noah.
At our inception, GRN used vinyl records. Cassettes were then the main format for many years. Audio CDs took over for some time. Now, our efforts have focused on getting our recordings onto the billions of mobile phones in use daily across the world.
In addition, most of our audio recordings are available for free download from our websites and can then distributed in various ways, including burned CDs, micro SD cards and Bluetooth between mobile phones. For the most remote communities without electricity, we distribute compact Kulumi solar-powered mp3 players.
GRN freely shares its audio, video and written scripts for use under Creative Commons. We welcome donations for products that are more expensive to produce, but we never look to make a profit and give away resources for free wherever possible.
Resources for Mission
The main resource that GRN provides are our recordings, which you can easily find on 5fish free of charge.
Alongside our recordings, we also offer a range of resources for mission, including:
- Flip charts, booklets, and pocket books that contain all the accompanying pictures in our audiovisual programs
- Kulumi players of different kinds
- Tumi Tiger & Lamb – fluffy toys with an audio player inside, designed for people who may have experienced trauma or struggle with dementia, for example
- Plus more
Not yet – we are considering ways to provide an online ordering solution.
To order our resources, please contact us.
If for any reason you are not completely satisfied with your product, please contact us so we can resolve any problems.
If you made a donation for your product but would like this given back to you, please contact us so we can help.
GRN will ship your goods within 3 working days of receipt of order.
Delivery dates may vary based on destination.
Yes, we can ship overseas.
No. We ceased production of the Saber in 2019, as the need for such a device had diminished and it no longer made financial sense to continue producing them.
Our primary methods of distributing our recordings are through our app 5fish, SD card/CD handouts, and Kulumi solar-powered mp3 players.
Other Resources
Yes! We provide teaching resources for Sunday School and similar settings free of charge. These can be used by laypeople and church leaders in various kinds of children’s ministry.
We’ll have online copies of these resources soon – but in the meantime you can email us to find out more.
Giving to GRN
We depend upon the Lord for the supply of funds to carry out His mission. We seek His will for what He wants our ministry to accomplish, then pray specifically for the resources needed. It is not our practice to solicit funds. Instead, we believe God prompts His people in answer to prayer to support the work and meet our needs. We praise God for His faithfulness over the years and for the joyful response of His people to give sacrificially and generously so that the Gospel of Jesus Christ can be shared around the world.
In all of our financial dealings, we hold to these 6 basic principles:
- God is the source of our provision and we give Him the credit for it.
- With regard to all things, including finances, we must be obedient to God’s direction and priorities. What God initiates, He will sustain.
- Prayer is the dominant strategy for the provision of our needs. We invite people to pray for God’s provision for our needs.
- We do not make direct appeals for funds. This does not preclude making some needs known in appropriate ways and situations.
- Money is never the main focus of our promotions or deputations.
- We avoid any manipulative techniques that attempt to coerce people to give.
GRN always seeks to be transparent with donations. You can find our financial policy here.
Yes!
Direct deposits can be made into our bank account through internet banking, or in person at any Westpac branch and many other banks.
Our bank details are:
- Bank: NatWest
- Account Name: Global Recordings Network UK
- Account Number: 83464697
- Sort Code: 60-11-01
Not yet, but we will update this website once we’ve set up an account.
Foreign cheques are acceptable in most major currencies (for example, US dollar cheques drawn from a US bank) but we do incur exchange costs and fees through this process.
Gifts in kind can be very useful to the ministry. If you would like to talk to someone about a gift in kind, please contact us.
There are many ways to contribute to our work! You can give gifts in kind (see above), give a one-off donation when you are able, give of your time by serving with us as a volunteer, dedicate yourself to praying for our financial needs to be met, or even leave a bequest to GRN in your will.
Please contact us if you’re interested, or have other idea of how you can support us.
If you are considering leaving a gift to GRN in your will, thank you so much for your generous heart! You can find more information on wills and bequests here.
Yes – you can specify how you’d like us to use your gift. You can give towards:
- A specific staff member
- Our work or staff in a particular country
- One of our projects
- Materials
- Where funds are most needed right now
- General funding
You can let us know by contacting us with details of your donation to help us identify it, or by making the reference in your bank transaction clear.
Unfortunately, donations made to GRN UK are not tax deductible.
Generally, donations made to GRN UK are non-refundable.
If you are unsure about a recent donation you have made, please contact us and we will gladly talk about it.
Serving with GRN
Awesome! Each day at GRN, we get to make a real difference for God’s Kingdom and we believe we have some of the best jobs in the world! Would you like to make a difference too?
No. Depending on your role, it would be an advantage to have some kind of cross-cultural experience and/or a second language, but it is not essential.
It’s up to you and depends on your situation. Our volunteers are often working part-time elsewhere, engaged in domestic duties or retired. If you have more time to offer, you may want to investigate a staff role.
Please contact us with your question about serving. Ministry opportunities with GRN can be full-time or part-time, according to how God is calling you to serve.
Yes. All GRN staff workers are required to accept and sign the GRN statement of faith.
The range of volunteer roles at GRN is limited only by your imagination! There are so many ways you can help. A few examples appear below:
- Admin (e.g. responding to online orders, managing social media accounts)
- Audio production skills (e.g. mixing, recording, remastering)
- Creative writing skills (e.g. for articles, scripts, etc.)
- Computer skills (e.g. Javascript & other technical skills)
- Data management skills (e.g. Data entry, analysis, etc.)
- Languages/linguistics
- Trades skills of any kind
- & many more!
Find more information or fill in an expression of interest here.
Yes. You can complete an online expression of interest form for volunteering here.
Yes! Get in touch with us and have a chat. We may be able to suggest ways to get involved that you haven’t even thought of!
Click here to see current staff opportunities.
It depends on the role. Some work, such as software development, can be undertaken remotely. Whatever the role, it would be ideal if you lived near the Winchester office at least occasionally, to attend meetings and pray with other staff in person. But you would also be connected to your GRN colleagues online. As already stated, the logistics of working with GRN can vary widely.
– Pray for us. This is one of the best ways to support us, by bringing our needs and praises to God. You can sign up to receive our monthly prayer newsletter here.
– Go on a short-term mission trip with us. One of the exciting aspects of our short-term missions is that you will be effective immediately as you bring with you the good news of Jesus in the heart language of those you are visiting. Many people hear the Gospel for the first time through our short-term missions, and you will have the privilege of giving it to them in the language they best understand. Contact us if you are interested in a short term mission.
– Represent GRN at your church. The aim of this role is to inspire other church members about what GRN is doing, and to give them the opportunity to use our resources or get involved themselves. The commitment is flexible and can include passing on GRN materials, informing the church of GRN events etc. If you are interested, please send us your contact details here.
– Be a GRN Ambassador. Word of mouth is the best way to share good news and we would appreciate your help to make the ministry of GRN better known. Please tell your friends and church about us. Invite them to pray with us by sending them this link to receive our monthly prayer letter.