CHAPTER V
The Rise Of Foreign Missions
Among American Baptists
The Deplorable Conditions of the Country-Low State of
Morals-Terrible Practices-Deistical Opinions of the French
and Indian Wars-Alliance of America and France-The Effects
of French Infidelity-Thomas Paine-Infidel
Clubs-Illuminism-Want of Religious Instruction-Baptist and
Presbyterian Ministers-Dull Preaching-Conditions in the
Colleges-Kentucky and Tennessee-Logan County-The Great
Revival-James McGready-His Sermons-The Camp Meeting at
Casper River-The Account of McGready-The Meeting
Described-Barton W. Stone-Other
Meetings-Extravagance-Lorenzo Dow-The Jerks and Other
Violent Exercises-Disorders-Such Meetings Continued for
Years-The Revival Did Great Good-Testimonies-Results Among
the Baptists-Effects Felt Throughout the United States.
The rise and progress of the
missionary spirit," says the celebrated Dr. Southey, "which is
at this time prevailing throughout the Protestant world, will be
one of the most remarkable features in the history of the
present age. It has not been sudden and violent, like that of
the Crusades; and yet it may be doubted whether the impulse
whereby that great movement was produced extended so widely
through all classes of society, or was felt with equal force.
Its rise was so obscure as hardly to be noticed. Little
attention had been excited by the Danish missionaries; scarcely
any by what the Dutch had effected in their Asiatic possessions;
and the labors of the Moravians would hardly have been known
beyond the bounds of their own little community, if it had not
been for Crantz?s account of their extraordinary exertions in
Greenland, and the entire success of that painful mission. By
that book this singular labor of love was made known to a few
general readers, and to what was then the still smaller number
of persons who felt a religious interest in such subjects. But
no general feeling was excited. The honor of giving the first
impulse to public feeling belongs to the English Baptists"
(London Eclectic Review, January, 1830). This impulse was
felt by the Baptists of the United States.
The Baptists of
the United States had always been missionary in their tendencies
and practices. The old Philadelphia Association, and other
associations in all sections of the country, had sent out
missionaries: The moral purpose of the denomination was behind
missionary operations and frequently money had been collected
for such purposes. Missionaries duly accredited had traveled
hundreds of miles, and in their long journeys had remained for
months from home.
As yet the
Baptists of America had not undertaken, on their own account,
any foreign mission tasks. They had no general organization, for
the district association was their only unit of procedure. They
had been a scattered and feeble folk, just emerging from dire
persecutions, and hence had not mobilized for foreign service.
But when William Carey entered India from England as a
missionary there was an intense response from many Baptists in
America (S. Pearce Carey, William Carey, New York, 1923).
Some of his best friends and most ardent supporters were in this
nation.
The letters and
appeals of Carey, Ward, and Marshman were widely circulated, and
read with deepening interest in this country. "The Star of the
East," preached and published in England, in 1808, by Claudius
Buchanan, the Scottish chaplain of the East India Company, who
gave to the world, in 1804, the first translation of the New
Testament in Persian and Hindostanese, had also stirred the
souls of the lovers of Jesus all over the land. As early as
1802, the Massachusetts Missionary Society was organized to
preach the gospel in new settlements of the United States, "and
further if circumstances ?should render it proper." "Mite
Societies" for missions were formed in many of the larger
churches. In November, 1811, the Boston Association of Baptist
ministers recommended contributions to the "Eastern
Translations"; and offered to transmit funds contributed for the
object. In 1812, $4,650 was given for this purpose in Boston and
Salem alone (Tupper, Foreign Missions of the Southern Baptist
Convention).
Some of the
associations immediately responded to the Foreign Mission call.
The Cayuga Association, New York, in 1814, is an example. Says
Belden:
At an
earlier date, a strong and heartfelt sympathy for the
perishing heathen had been awakened by the news which had
reached this country, of the success which had crowned the
efforts of "The English Baptist Missionary Society" in
Bengal. In their circular addressed to the churches in 1813,
one year previous to the formation of the American Board of
Foreign Missions, they say, ?"A flame of love seems to have
been enkindled among our brethren in England, for the souls
of the poor benighted Hindoos; and God in his boundless
mercy, hath crowned their labors with astonishing success;
hundreds, yea thousands of those poor pagans, have, through
their instrumentality, become the hopeful heirs of
salvation. These will eternally sing the triumphs of
sovereign grace, and adore God for sending the gospel among
them. These things animate us, and we wish to enquire
what we have done to send the gospel among our
destitute brethren." Thus God was preparing the hearts of
his people to receive the news of those singular providences
which established an American Baptist Mission in Burmah, and
furnished the means which have been so successfully employed
and so signally blessed in the salvation of heathen souls.
And when that news arrived, Cayuga Association was among the
first to offer to the Board of the General Convention, her
cooperation in the great and glorious work of sending to the
heathen the preached gospel (Belden, History of the
Cayuga Association).
Robert
Rallston, Esq., of Philadelphia, at one time remitted to the
Baptist mission at Serampore, for himself and others, three
thousand three hundred and fifty-seven dollars and sixty-three
cents. Dr. Carey acknowledged the receipt of six thousand
dollars from American Christians during the years of 1806 and
1807. The interest of the churches in missions to the East was
also, from time to time, quickened by the arrival of
missionaries from England, on their way to India, or on their
return home.
Dr. Francis
Wayland has given a fine summary of this period in Baptist
missions. "The same spirit," says he, "to a considerable degree,
animated the Baptist churches, though their numbers were small,
and their means but feeble. The Baptist Missionary Society of
Massachusetts was formed in 1802. The next year, Dr. Baldwin, at
the request of the society, commenced the publication of the
Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Magazine. This periodical
had an extensive circulation throughout the Northern States. It
was principally occupied by the journals of missionaries in our
frontier settlements, narratives of revivals in our churches,
and missionary intelligence from abroad. Dr. Baldwin was a
correspondent of Dr. Carey, of Fuller, and of Ryland; and, being
imbued with their spirit, he delighted to cooperate with them in
spreading before his brethren the accounts which they furnished
of the triumphs of the cross.
"In the year
1812, the Salem Bible Translation and Foreign Mission Society
was formed, under the fostering care of the late Dr. Bolles.
This society, until the establishment of the Baptist General
Convention, contributed its collections in aid of the Baptist
missions in the East Indies. Nor would it be just to omit, in
this place, the name of Rev. William Stoughton, D. D., pastor of
the Samson Street Church, Philadelphia, and afterwards secretary
of the Baptist General Convention. He had been, when in England,
the friend and associate of the most efficient friends of
missions there. He was in frequent correspondence with all of
them and was, perhaps, the most direct channel by which their
spirit was diffused among our churches. Distinguished for
eloquence, varied accomplishments, and most animating views of
the progress of the gospel, the triumph of the cross was always
a favorite theme in his discourses. Many of our most successful
ministers were his students in theology; and they imbibed in a
happy degree his characteristic sentiments.
"Of course, I
do not assume that the missionary spirit was at this time
universal. Far from it. It is by no means universal now. Men of
enlarged views, steadfast faith, and ardent piety, in various
denominations, had become, to a good degree, interested in the
subject of missions, and their influence was diffusing itself
among the less favored brethren. The beams of the sun had only
fallen upon the top of the mountains; they had not as yet rested
upon the hillsides; much less had they penetrated into the
valleys. But the mountain tops testified that the sun had risen.
"As yet, no
general organization had been formed for carrying the gospel to
the heathen. Nor is this to be wondered at. It was much less
easy to form general organizations then than at present. That
was not the age of steamboats, railroads, or telegraphs. Besides
this, our national character has greatly changed in the course
of forty or fifty years. We were then by no means conscious of
our strength. There were then comparatively few things in which
we had tried what we could do. This want of national confidence
affected all of our public decisions, and it, of course, had its
effect on our views of what was practicable in the missionary
enterprise.
"In this state
of public feeling, all that was wanted was the occurrence of
some event which would impose the necessity of immediate action.
Such an event was found in the application of the young men at
Andover, to the General Association of Massachusetts, for an
appointment as missionaries to the heathen" (Wayland, Memoir
of the Life and Labors of Adoniram Judson, I. 46-48. New
York, 1860).
God was
preparing in a wonderful way an opening for Baptist missions in
foreign lands. The conversion of Adoniram Judson and Luther Rice
to Baptist doctrines and practices was one of the most
phenomenal events in all the history of missions. This foreign
mission enterprise, in the United States, did not originate with
the Baptists, but with the Congregationalists. How this work
began in a prayer meeting of young men, how a missionary society
was organized to send them out, how the money was secured for
their equipment, how they were ordained, how they were called to
India, and how Judson and Rice became Baptists, is one of the
most thrilling stories ever told.
A part of this
history has been recorded by the Congregational Board and is as
follows: "The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign
Missions had its origin in a desire of several young men in the
Andover Theological Seminary to preach the gospel to a heathen
world. The four names appended to the memorial to the General
Association of Massachusetts, which was the immediate occasion
of forming the Board, were Adoniram Judson, Samuel Nott, Samuel
J. Mills, and Samuel Newell. Mills is known to have come under a
written pledge to engage in a mission to the heathen as early as
September, 1808. He was a member of Williams College; and then
and there a society was formed, through his agency, called ?The
Brethren,? which had for its object ?to effect, in the person of
it members, a mission or missions to the heathen.? This society
was transferred, with its constitution and records, to the
Seminary at Andover, in the year 1809, or early in 1810,
and has continued to the present time. It is distinct from the
?Society of Inquiry respecting Missions,? though its members are
of course connected with that well known and useful body. The
memorialists were each from a different college; Judson being a
graduate of Brown, Nott of Union, Newell of Harvard, and Mills
of Williams. There is good reason for the belief that the
hallowed flame in each of these brethren had not its origin in
man. Mr. Nott distinctly avers that the ?starting point and
early progress? of the movement in his mind, was ?without any
knowledge of the existence? of those who were so soon to be his
associates. He spent only one year at Andover, going thither in
November, 1809. Hall, Judson, Newell, and Nott were of the class
that finished its course in 1810, which was the earliest class
except one in the institution. Mills was in the class of 1812.
Hall was there during only a part of the last year, coming about
the time of the General Association; which is presumed to be the
reason his name was not on the memorial. When Judson came to
Andover in 1808, he had not attained even to a confirmed belief
in Christianity; but his mind was in an inquiring state, and he
soon united himself heartily with the people of God. The reading
of Buchanan?s ?Star of the East,? in 1809, led him to reflect
upon his duty to the heathen, and in February of the next year
he resolved to devote his life to a foreign mission; not then
knowing that there were others in the Seminary, or even in the
country, who had come to the same resolution. The memorial to
the General Association was drawn up by Mr. Judson; and his
standing as a scholar and great energy of character made it
quite certain that he exerted a leading influence in the
measures which gave occasion to the formation of the Board at
this time. But the fact that the name of Mills was attached to
the memorial, though he was then in the Junior class, shows that
he also was acknowledged by his brethren as a leader in this
movement. Such was his shrinking from the public eye, that we
may believe his name was there, and third on the list, only at
the earnest solicitation of all of his associates. The names of
Luther Rice and James Richards were appended to the paper, but
happening to stand last, ?they were struck off,? as we learn
from Dr. Judson ?at the suggestion of Dr. Spring, for fear of
alarming the Association with too large a number.? Rice was in
the class of 1811. Richards had subscribed the pledge in
Williams College as early as 1808, and was in the class of Mills
both at college and at Andover. Hall was one of the ablest
missionaries from the American churches. His graduation at
Williams College?as was Judson?s at Brown?was with the highest
honors of his class. Mills was two years the junior of Hall in
college; but, upon the conversion of the latter, in the third
year of his course, the sagacity of that remarkable man singled
him out for a ,foreign missionary; and so strong were Mills?
convictions, that he declared Hall to be ?ordained and stamped a
missionary by the sovereign hand of God.?
"In the autumn
of 1809, Hall received a call to become pastor of a church in
Connecticut. ?Then,? says Dr. Ebenezer Porter, who was his
theological teacher in Connecticut, ?then the heart of the
missionary came out. Then was revealed the secret so long
cherished between himself and his beloved brother Samuel J.
Mills. These kindred spirits, associated in college, often
interchanged visits afterward, mutually enkindled that holy
flame which nothing but death could extinguish in their own
bosoms, and which has since extended its sacred influences to so
many thousands of other hearts. The general purpose of these
devoted young men was fixed. Sometimes they talked of ?cutting a
path through the moral wilderness of the West to the Pacific.?
Sometimes they thought of South America; then of Africa. Their
object was the salvation of the heathen; but no specific shape
was given to their plans till the formation of the American
Board of Foreign Missions. Before this period the churches were
asleep. Even ministers were but half-awake. To many it seemed a
visionary thing in Mr. Hall, that he should decline an
invitation to settle, attended by so many attractive
circumstances, and so much prospect of usefulness. But I can
never forget with what a glistening eye and firm accent this
youthful pioneer of foreign missions, full of faith in the Holy
Ghost, said, ?No, I must not settle in any parish in
Christendom. Others will be left, whose health or engagements
require them to stay at home; but I can sleep on the ground; can
endure hunger and hardship; God calls me to the heathen; woe to
me if I preach not the gospel to the heathen.? He went; and the
day of judgment, while it tells the results of his labors, will
rebuke the apathy with which others have slumbered over the
miseries of dying pagans.
"The
institution of the Andover Seminary, at the time the Holy Spirit
was interesting the minds of graduates from different colleges
in the work of foreign missions, is worthy of grateful notice.
It was the only way in which they could be brought into
circumstances favorable to personal acquaintance, and for
associating and acting together. Nor should we omit to notice
the important fact, that the missionary spirit should have been
enkindled in the hearts of such men as Worcester, Spring,
Evarts, and the Professors of Andover. The Seminary brought the
young men where they could combine their action; and these
fathers?for such they now seem, though most of them were then in
the very prime of life?responded at once and cordially to their
appeals. Hence the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign
Missions was instituted at Bradford, by the General Association
of Massachusetts, on the 29th of June, 1810. These young men and
their memorial were the occasion that gave rise to the Board,
but the idea and plan of it arose in other minds. The idea would
seem first to have occurred to Dr. Worcester, on Wednesday
morning, June 27, as he and Dr. Spring rode together in a chaise
from Andover to Bradford; and the plan of it was discussed
between them as they rode along. But the whole was of God, and
to him be the glory.
"The Rev. Kiah
Bayley, writing to the Secretaries of the Board from Vermont in
the year 185, being then eighty-five years old, communicated the
following incidents, which are worthy of preservation. He says:
?A short time before my ordination at Newcastle, Maine, in 1797,
the Rev. Alexander McLain of Bristol, had received from his
friends in Scotland the sermons delivered in London by Dr.
Hawies and others at the formation of the London Missionary
Society. He was charmed with them, and lent them to me. I took
the pamphlet to my wife, who was then at Newburyport, and she
lent it to her friends, who read it with great avidity. A
subscription paper was immediately issued, and a printer
engaged. The work was soon in circulation. Dr. Samuel Spring And
others in Newburyport caught the sacred flame. I know not that
there was any other reprint of those sermons in America. Thus I
have pointed out one little rill from which your society rose.
There were others, no doubt, but I believe this was the leader.
The sermons preached in London were sent to Scotland, and from
Scotland to Maine, and from Maine to Newburyport. There the seed
germinated, and the fruit will yet shake Lebanon.?"
"Messrs. Hall,
Judson, Newell, and Nott completed their theological course in
September, 1810, but were not able to proceed on their mission
until 1812. Meanwhile, it is well known, Mr. Judson visited
England to see if the London Missionary Society would arrange
with the Board for a joint support of the mission; an embassy
which happily failed of success. The London Directors rightly
judged that two controlling powers, so widely separated, could
not act with unity and decision. They also expressed the hope
that as soon as the American churches became properly informed,
they would furnish the means of sustaining ?not only four, but
forty missionaries.? Those were times of non-intercourse,
embargo, and commercial embarrassments in this country, and the
terrible Napoleon conflicts shook the civilized world. As a
passage to India seemed not likely to occur soon, Messrs. Hall
and Newell went to Philadelphia, in the autumn of 1811, to
pursue their medical studies. Mr. Nott has shown us two letters
from Mr. Hall, setting forth the feelings of himself and
associates in view of the contemplated foreign mission. The
first was written on the 9th of January, 1812, and contains the
following:
All hands
upon deck! The Lord seems to be opening the door for us to
enter speedily upon the mission. This evening I
providentially fell in with Captain Cumming, of the ship
Amiable, of this city, who told me that his vessel would be
the first to sail for India, and at the middle of April at
the furthest. . .It is currently reported that a messenger
has arrived in this country from England, with a proposal to
rescind the Order in Council on a certain easy condition, to
which it is said to be ascertained that our government will
readily assent. But if this good news should not prove to be
true, it is almost universally believed that, at any rate,
the offending order will expire as soon as February, and the
intelligent merchants here confidently believe that our
commerce will be revived early in the spring. This is Mr.
Ralston?s opinion; he thinks we should get away in the
spring. The prospect is such that no time should be lost.
What will our Commissioners do? We shall immediately
communicate this to Mr. Worcester and brother Judson. Let us
bless the Lord and rejoice, but with trembling.
On the 13th of
January he thus wrote:
I have seen
Mr. Ralston today. The good man?s hopes in our favor are
strengthened. He has some fears. He will see the owner of
the ship Amiable. Under present circumstances, we cannot
tell when we shall return to New England. If possible, I
shall remain here until the lectures are closed, which will
be the last of February. We must continue here till we learn
more about a voyage to India. We should not be surprised to
find that the Commissioners were not able to support us, and
ourselves cast on the London Society. We have too long been
in suspense."
"The suspense
was relieved sooner than they expected. The Harmony, Captain
Brown, proposed sailing on short notice, from Philadelphia to
Calcutta, and could take the missionaries as passengers. The
narration will be continued from the statement of the Prudential
Committee to the Board at its next annual meeting in September."
"?In the latter
part of January the resolution was taken. The ordination of the
missionaries was appointed to be on the Thursday of the next
week?the latest day which would leave time for them to get to
Philadelphia in season. Notice was immediately given to the
friends of the mission in the vicinity, and means were out in
operation with all possible activity, and to as great an extent
as the limited time would allow, for raising the requisite
funds.?"
"?In the
meantime, Mr. Luther Rice, a licentiate preacher from the
Theological Institution at Andover, whose heart had long been
engaged in the missionary cause, but who had been restrained
from offering himself to the Board by particular circumstances,
presented himself to the Committee with good recommendations,
and with an earnest desire to join the mission. The case was a
very trying one. The Committee was not invested with full powers
to admit missionaries, and they still felt a very heavy
embarrassment from the want of funds. In view of all the
circumstances, however, they dared not to reject Mr. Rice, and
they came to the conclusion to assume the responsibility, and
admit him as a missionary, to be ordained with the four other
brethren, and sent out with them.?"
"?While the
preparations were making, it came to the knowledge of the
Committee, that the brigantine Caravan, of Salem, was to sail to
Calcutta in a few days, and could carry three or four
passengers; and after attention to the subject, it was deemed
advisable that two of the missionaries, with their wives, should
take passage in that vessel. This lessened the great risk, and
was attended with several advantages.?"
"?According to
appointment, on the 6th of February, the missionaries were
ordained at the Tabernacle in Salem. A season of more impressive
solemnity has scarcely been witnessed in our country. The sight
of five young men, of highly respectable talents and
attainments, and who might reasonably have promised themselves
very eligible situations in our churches, forsaking parents, and
friends, and country, and every alluring prospect, and devoting
themselves to the privations, hardships, and perils of a mission
for life, to people sitting in darkness and in the region and
shadow of death, in a far-distant land and unpropitious clime,
could not fail deeply to affect every heart not utterly
destitute of feeling. Nor less affecting were the views which
the whole scene was calculated to impress of the deplorable
condition of the pagan world, of the riches of divine grace
displayed in the gospel, and of the obligations on all on whom
this grace is conferred, to use their utmost endeavors in making
the gospel universally known. God was manifestly present; a
crowded and attentive assembly testified, with many tears, the
deep interest which they felt in the occasion; and not a few
remembered the scene with fervent gratitude, and can say, it was
good to be there?" (Memorial Volume of the First Fifty Years
o f the American Board o f Commissioners for Foreign Missions,
39-44. Boston, 1862).
Such was the
genesis of the foreign mission movement in the United States. Up
to this date the Baptists were not connected with the affair.
But on the passage Judson availed himself of this period of
leisure to investigate the scriptural authority for infant
baptism. He was prompted to this course by two considerations.
In the first place, he looked forward to the time when he should
be surrounded by converts from heathenism. How should he treat
children and servants, and did he have authority to baptize such
persons? Besides this, he was going in the first instance to
Serampore, to reside for a time with the Baptist missionaries.
He felt the necessity of re-examining the subject, as he
expected to be called upon by them to defend his belief. In this
latter respect, however, he found himself singularly
disappointed; for the missionaries in Serampore made no
reference of the subject to their guest.
The result of
the investigation was that Judson became a Baptist. Mrs. Ann
Hasseltine Judson, wrote, from the Isle of France, February 14,
1813, to her parents, explaining the situation as follows:
I will now,
my dear parents and sisters, give you some account of our
change of sentiment, relative to the subject of baptism. Mr.
Judson?s doubts commenced on our passage from America. While
translating the New Testament, in which he was engaged, he
used frequently to say that the Baptists were right in their
mode of administering the ordinance. Knowing that he should
meet the Baptists in Serampore, he felt impelled to attend
to it more closely, to be able to defend his sentiments.
After our arrival in Serampore, his mind for two or three
weeks was much taken up with missionary inquiries and our
difficulties with government, as to prevent his attending to
the subject of baptism. But as we were awaiting the arrival
of our brethren, and having nothing in particular to attend
to, he again took up the subject. I tried to have him give
it up, and rest satisfied with his old sentiments, and
frequently told him, if he became a Baptist, 1 would not.
He, however, said he felt it his duty to examine closely a
subject on which he had so many doubts. After we removed to
Calcutta, he found in the library of our chamber many books
on both sides, which he determined to read candidly and
prayerfully, and to hold fast, or embrace the truth, however
mortifying, however great the sacrifice. I now commenced
reading on the subject, with all my prejudices on the
Pedobaptist side. We had with us Dr. Worcester?s, Dr.
Austin?s, Peter Edward?s, and other Pedobaptist writings.
But after closely examining the subject for several weeks,
we were constrained to acknowledge that the truth appeared
to lie on the Baptists? side. It was extremely trying to
reflect on the consequences of our becoming Baptists. We
knew that it would wound and grieve our dear friends in
America-that we should lose their approbation and esteem. We
thought it probable that the commission would refuse to
support us; and, what was more distressing than anything, we
knew we must be separated from our missionary associates,
and go alone to some heathen land. These things were very
trying to us, and caused our hearts to bleed for anguish. We
felt that we had no home in this world, and no friend but
each other. Our friends at Serampore were extremely
surprised when we wrote them a letter requesting baptism, as
they had known nothing of our having had any doubts on the
subject. We were baptized on the 6th of September, in the
Baptist chapel in Calcutta. Mr. J. preached a sermon at
Calcutta, on that subject, soon after we were baptized
which, in compliance with the request of a number who heard
it, he has been preparing for the press. Brother Rice was
baptized several weeks after we were. It was a very great
relief to our minds to have him join. us, as we expected to
be entirely alone in a mission.
Nothing
remained for Judson to do but to inform the American Board of
Foreign Commissioners for Foreign Missions of his change of
sentiments. At the same time he addressed letters to some
Baptist ministers in Boston and Salem. The following letters
will explain his position:
To the Rev.
Dr. Baldwin, of Boston.
Calcutta,
August 31, 1812.
Rev. and
Dear Sir: I write you a line to express my grateful
acknowledgments to you for the advantage I have derived from
your publications on baptism; particularly from your "Series
of Letters"; also to introduce the following copy of a
letter which I forwarded last week to the Baptist
missionaries at Serampore, and which you are at liberty to
use as you think best.
I am, sir,
with much affection and respect,
Your obliged
friend and servant,
Adoniram Judson, Jr.
Calcutta, August 27, 1812.
To the Rev.
Messrs. Carey, Marshman, and Ward:
As you have
been ignorant of the late exercises of my mind on the
subject of baptism, the communication which I am about to
make may occasion you some surprise.
It is about
four months since I took the subject into serious and
prayerful consideration. My inquiries commenced during my
passage from America, and after much laborious research and
painful trial, which I shall not now detail, have issued in
entire conviction, that the
immersion of a professing
believer is the only Christian baptism.
In these
exercises I have not been alone. Mrs. Judson has been
engaged in a similar examination, and has come to the same
conclusion. Feeling, therefore, that we are in an unbaptized
state, we wish to profess our faith in Christ by being
baptized in obedience to his sacred commands.
Adoniram
Judson, Jr.
Calcutta, September 1, 1812.
Rev. Sir:
After transmitting to the Rev. Dr. Worcester a copy of the
above letter to the Baptist missionaries, I have, under date
of this day, written him as follows:
Rev. and
Dear Sir: My change of sentiments on the subject of baptism
is considered by my missionary brethren as incompatible with
my continuing their fellow laborer in the mission which they
contemplate on the Island of Madagascar; and it will, I
presume, be considered by the Board of Commissioners as
equally incompatible with their continuing their missionary.
The Board, undoubtedly, feel as unwilling to support a
Baptist missionary as I feel to comply with their
instructions, which particularly direct us to baptize
"credible believers with
their households."
The
dissolution of my connection with the Board of
Commissioners, and a separation from my dear missionary
brethren, I consider most distressing consequences of my
late change of sentiments, and indeed, the most distressing
events which have befallen me. I have now the prospect
before me of going alone to some distant island, unconnected
with any society at present existing from which I might be
furnished with assistant laborers or pecuniary support.
Whether the Baptist churches in America will compassionate
my situation, I know not. I hone. therefore, that while my
friends condemn what they deem a departure from the truth,
they will at least pity me and pray for me.
With the
same sentiments of affection and respect as ever,
I am, sir,
your friend and servant,
Adoniram Judson, Jr.
Rev. Dr.
Worcester, Corresponding Secretary of the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
You will
receive a letter from Dr. Marshman, accompanying thin Should
there be formed, in accordance with the ideas therein
suggested a Baptist society for the support of a mission in
these parts, I shall be ready to consider myself
their missionary; and remain, dear sir,
Your obliged
friend and servant,
Adoniram Judson, Jr.
To the Rev.
Dr. Bolles, Salem, Mass.
Calcutta, September 1, 1812.
Rev. Sir: I
recollect that, during a short interview I had with you in
Salem, I suggested the formation of a society among the
Baptists in America for the support of foreign missions, in
imitation of the exertions of your English brethren. Little
did I then expect to be personally concerned in such an
attempt.
Within a
few months, I have experienced an entire change of
sentiments on the subject of baptism. My doubts concerning
the correctness of my former system of belief commenced
during my passage from America to this country; and after
many painful trials, which none can know but those who are
taught to relinquish a system in which they had been
educated, I settled down in the full persuasion that the
immersion of a professing believer in Christ is the only
Christian baptism.
Mrs. Judson
is united with me in this persuasion. We have signified our
views and wishes to the Baptist missionaries at Serampore
and expect to be baptized in this city next Lord?s day.
A
separation from my missionary brethren, and a dissolution of
my connection with the Board of Commissioners, seem to be
necessary consequences. The missionaries at Serampore are
exerted to the utmost of their ability in managing and
supporting their extensive and complicated mission.
Under these
circumstances I look to you. Alone, in this foreign heathen
land, I make my appeal to those whom, with their permission,
I will call my Baptist brethren in the United States.
With the
advice of the brethren in Serampore, I am contemplating a
mission in one of the eastern islands. They have lately sent
their brother Chater to Ceylon, and their brother Robinson
to Java. At present, Amboya seems to present the most
favorable opening. Fifty thousand souls are there perishing
without the means of life; and the situation of the island
is such that a mission there established might, with the
blessing of God, be extended to the neighboring island in
those seas.
But should
I go thither, it is a most painful reflection that I must go
alone, and also uncertain of the means of support. But I
trust in God. He has frequently enabled me to praise his
divine goodness, and will never forsake those who put their
trust in him. I am, dear sir,
Yours, in the
Lord Jesus,
Adoniram Judson, Jr.
The following
is an extract from a letter of Dr. Marshman, of Serampore, to
Dr. Baldwin, of Boston, September 1, 1812:
A note
which brother Judson sent to brother Carey last Saturday has
occasioned much reflection among us. In it he declares his
belief that believers? baptism alone is the doctrine of the
Scriptures, and requests to be baptized in the name of the
Lord Jesus.
This
unexpected circumstance seems to suggest many ideas. The
change in the young man?s mind, respecting the ordinance of
Christ, seems quite the effect of divine truth operating on
the mind. It began when no Baptist was near (on board of
ship), and when he, in the conscientious discharge of his
duty, was examining the subject in order to maintain what he
then deemed truth on his arrival in Bengal. And so carefully
did he conceal the workings of his mind from us, on his
arrival, that he scarcely gave us a hint respecting them
before he sent the note to brother Carey. This was not
indeed very difficult for him to do, as we make it a point
to guard against obtruding on missionary brethren of
different sentiments any conversation relative to baptism.
This change
then, which I believe few who knew brother Judson will
impute to whim, or to. anything besides sincere conviction,
seems to point out something relative to the duty of our
Baptist brethren with you, as it relates to the cause of
missions. It can scarcely be expected that the Board of
Commissioners will support a Baptist missionary, who cannot,
of course, comply with their instructions, and baptize
whole households on the parents? faith; and it is
certain that the young man ought not to be left to perish
for want, merely because he loved the truth more than father
and mother; nor be compelled to give up missionary work for
want of support therein. Now, though we should certainly
interfere to prevent a circumstance like this happening,
particularly as we have given our Pedobaptist brother
Newell, gone to the Isle of France, an order to draw upon us
should he be in distress, yet, to say nothing of the
missionary concerns already lying on us, and constantly
enlarging. it seems to us, though Providence itself were
raising up this young man, that ydu might at least partake
of the zeal of our Congregational missionary brethren around
you. I would wish, then, that you should share in the
glorious work, by supporting him. Let us do whatsoever
things are becoming, and whatsoever things are
lovely, and have the reverse of these for others. After God
has thus given you a missionary of your own nation, faith,
and order, without the help or knowledge of man, let me
entreat you, and Dr. Messer, and brethren Bolles and
Moriarty, humbly to accept the gift.
To you I am
sure I need add no more than to beg you to give my cordial
love to all our brethren around you.
I may
probably write you again soon, and in the meantime remain
yours, in the Lord.
It was in this
manner that foreign missions was thrust upon the Baptists of the
United States. After many leadings the mission was established
under Judson in Burmah. What the celebrated Earl of Shaftesbury
said of another mission was equally true of this one. "I do not
believe," said he, "that in the whole history of missions, I do
not believe in the history of diplomacy, or in the history of
any negotiations carried on between man and man, we can find
anything to equal the wisdom, the soundness, and the pure
evangelical truth of the body of men who constituted the
American mission. I have said it twenty times before, and I will
say it again, ?that they are a marvelous combination of common
sense and piety. . .There they stand, tested by years, tried by
their works, and exemplified by their fruits; and I believe that
it will be found that those American missionaries have done more
toward upholding the truth and spreading the gospel of Christ in
the East than any other body of men in this or any other age."
There must be a
home base, and there was a man admirably prepared to do this
work. Luther Rice had already been severely attacked with
disease of the liver, and his health had become quite
precarious. The views of the Baptists in this country were
unknown to the missionaries, and it seemed desirable that some
direct intercourse might be commenced between the parties at
present personally unknown to each other. It was probable,
however, that the labors of Rice might be eminently useful in
awakening a missionary spirit among the churches at home. With
the hope of recovering his health, and at the same time
accomplishing these objects, it was deemed wise for him to
return to this country. He sailed March 15, 1813, for New York
by the way of St. Salvador (Wayland, I.).
Books for
further reference:
S. Pearce
Carey, William Carey. New York, 1923.
Memorial
Volume of the first Fifty Years of the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
Boston, 1862.
Wayland,
Francis, Memoir of the Life and Labors? of Rev. Adoniram
Judson. Boston, 1853. 2 volumes.
N. M. Williams,
Theodore Parker and Adoniram Judson, Bibliotheca Sacra,
XXVI. 290-314.
Letters of Dr.
John Ryland to Dr. Stephen West, Bibliotheca Sacra XXX.
178-186. Andover, 1873.
Edward Warren
Capen, The Significance of the Haystack Centennial,
Bibliotheca
Sacra, LIII. 703-721.
Oberlin, 1906.
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