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Adonirum
Judson was born in 1788, the son of a devout
Congregationalist minister. From early in his life he excelled
in everything he touched. So excellent was young Judson's
scholarship that he was enrolled at Rhode Island Christian
College at the age of 16.
Unlike
many other missionaries, Adnorium did not have an early call
from God or love for Him. In fact, Judson fell in with a number
of atheists, chief of which was James Eames who became his
dear friend. By the age of 20, the minister's son had completely
denounced Christ and his upbringing. "Like the prodigal son
he left home in quest of an exciting life. He wanted to escape
parental restraints." 1
The story of Adonirum Judson's conversion has been
told so many times that it really does not need to be documented.
Not
long after leaving home, sure of his new atheistic beliefs,
Judson spent the night at an inn. The innkeeper warned him
that the only room he had would be a room with a young man
who was very ill and dying. Adnorium said that was no problem.
Through the night he heard the agonizing cries and pleas of
a dying man who obviously did not know God. As the man's cries
grew weaker in the early hours of morning, Judson wondered
what the destiny was that awaited such a man or for that matter
himself. At sunrise, he inquired of the innkeeper what the
condition of the sick man was. "Oh, he died in the night,"
was the curt reply. "Do you know who he was?" asked Judson.
To his horror he was told that the name of the man he had
heard die in the night was James Eames, the man who had led
him into unbelief and atheism.
Shaken
by the event of his friend's death, a different Adonirum Judson
returned home and sought admission to Andover Theological
Seminary. Once enrolled, the writing of the Puritan, Thomas
Boston led Judson to full faith in Christ and salvation.2
Soon, what had once been a raving atheist had been transformed
into a young man who felt God calling him into missions.
There
was one great problem facing Judson concerning missions; in
early 1800 America, there were no foreign missionaries. Somewhere
around 1811 Judson wrote the following in a magazine article:
"How
do Christians discharge this trust committed to them? They
let three fourths of the world sleep the sleep of death,
ignorant of the simple truth that a Savior died for them.
Content if they can be useful in the little circle of their
acquaintances, they quietly sit and see whole nations perish
for lack of knowledge." 3
Through
meeting and prayer with other concerned Congregationalists,
Judson helped to formulate plans to form a mission society
dedicated to sending missionaries to India. The budding missionary
found something else during that time, his future wife. At
the home of a deacon where the mission society met Judson
fell in love with a godly young woman by the name of Ann.
Imagine being Ann's father when he received this letter from
Adonirum Judson:
"I have
not to ask, whether you can consent to part with your daughter
early next Spring, to see her no more in this world; whether
you can consent to her departure, and her subjection to
the hardships and sufferings of missionary life; whether
you can consent to her exposure to the dangers of the ocean;
to the fatal influence of the climate of India; to every
kind of want and distress; to degradation, insult, persecution,
and perhaps a violent death. Can you consent to all this,
for the sake of Him who left His heavenly home and died
for her and for you; for the sake of perishing immortal
souls, for the sake of Zion, and the glory of God?" 4
With
her eyes wide open to the impending dangers of missionary
life, Anne consented to marriage and she and Judson were wed
in February of 1812.
The
Judsons set sail for India while their good friend Luther
Rice prepared to come on a later ship. As they settled in
for the four-month journey to India, Adnorium and Ann also
settled in to an intense study of Scripture. They knew that
when they arrived in India they would be ministering alongside
the famous Baptist missionaries of Serampore Mission led by
none other than William Carey. How would they work together
with their differences concerning baptism? Adonirum was also
seeking to reconcile some questions he had about his own Covenant
Theology. All of their first converts would be adults. He
wondered if they should also baptize the children of these
new believers in a pagan land. 5
Had the Judsons known that the Baptist missionaries of India
had a policy to avoid such controversies, they may never have
embarked on this study. Regardless, they became convinced
over the weeks of study and prayer that believer's baptism
was the New Testament mandate and determined to be baptized
by immersion when they arrived in India. In God's providence,
Luther Rice would come to the same conclusion separately from
them.
Ann
and Adonirum left America as Congregationalist but arrived
in India as Baptists. They knew this decision would severely
affect their relationship with their friends and family back
in America. Ann wrote to one of her closest friends; "My dear
Nancy, we are confirmed Baptists, not because we wished to
be, but because truth compelled us to be … We anticipate the
loss of reputation, and of the affection and esteem of many
of our American friends." 6
When they landed in Calcutta, Judson wrote to William
Carey, "… feeling that we are in an unbaptized state, we wish
to profess our faith in Christ by being baptized in obedience
to his sacred commands." 7
The parting of the Judsons and Luther Rice with the Congregationalist
was on friendly terms and was used to further the kingdom
of God just as did the parting of Paul and Barnabas.
Upon
landing in India, the new Baptists found that their greatest
enemy was not paganism but the British East India Company.
Greed caused the British government to distrust missionaries
and the changes that took place in their converts. People
freed from sin have a bad habit of bowing down to God rather
than man and the British knew that. Refused permanent status
in India, Ann and Adonirum set sail for Burma.
No
place could have more fulfilled Adonirum's prophecy in his
letter of proposal to Ann's father than Burma. Burma was a
land of superstition, governmental corruption and dedicated
Buddhism. William Carey's son Felix wrote of Burma:
"The
houses of Rangoon were miserably built, the streets were
filthy with vermin, the rents wickedly oppressive, the taxes
absurdly high, and the punishments barbarous…"8
Burma
was all that and more. Torture and mass executions were common
occurrences. Any foreign religion was dealt with swiftly and
unmercifully. The country's rulers were proud men who vainly
believed their nation was superior to all others and invincible.
This is the place, which Adonirum had brought his fair Ann
to minister for the Lord Jesus Christ.
There
was plenty to do upon arriving in Rangoon. The Burmese language
was difficult beyond belief; a seemingly endless string of
words with no punctuation or recognizable sentence structure
of any kind. Translating was Judson's sole work for over six
years. Then in 1819, the first Burman, Moung Nau, gave his
life to Christ and was baptized. Soon several more were baptized
and a new missionary, Dr. Pierce joined them. Things were
looking up as they often do just before the storm hits.
Judson
and Pierce slowly had gained the king's approval only to have
that destroyed by the announcement that 5000 British troops
had attacked and taken Rangoon. Even though the missionaries
were not British, they were white foreigners and were soon
imprisoned in the most horrid conditions one could imagine.
For almost two years, Judson and Pierce were imprisoned along
with 100 other men in a single room. Had it not been for Ann's
loving devotion and care they would have surely perished.
As the British won battle after battle it became apparent
Burma was lost. Seeing the inevitable, the Burmese realized
that the missionaries could help them in translation and negotiations.
Thus, Judson and Pierce were finally set free.
The
long imprisonment had taken its toll on Ann. Through that
time she had nursed a child and worked tirelessly to feed
her husband and Dr. Pierce. It was all more than Ann's frail
body could take. A few months after Adonirum was freed, his
dear wife died on October 24th, 1826 to be followed by their
daughter Maria in 1827. The call of missions had indeed cost
the Judson's dearly. These losses were great but what followed
was even more grave.
Adonirum
sank into a deep depression. He renounced all outward acceptability,
returning an honorary doctorate he had earned from Brown University.
Finally he removed himself to the heart of a tiger infested
jungle to live alone in a hut. Judson spent forty days in
the jungle looking at his heart and contemplating his call.
The local natives considered his survival through those days
as nothing short of the way that God spared Daniel in the
lion's den. 9
Just
as David found his way out of the Cave at Adullam so Judson
immerged a better man after those darks nights in the jungle.
He plunged into his work with renewed vigor and by 1839 recorded
47 baptisms. During 1832 there were 217 who came to Christ
and 1144 baptisms in 1836. God blessed the missionaries' sacrifice
with more and more leaving the darkness of Buddhism for the
light of Jesus Christ.
Eight
years after the death of Ann, Adonirum married the widow of
a fellow missionary, Sarah Boardman. None of Ann's children
survived but Adonirum and Sarah would have six children who
survived. God had restored much to Judson and in 1840 He allowed
him to finish his great translation of the Burmese Bible.
Nearly eight more years passed with great victories and great
love between Sarah and Adnorium. Again, tragedy visited Judson,
as Sarah grew ill. Determined to go with her to America, Judson
left Burma with his wife. The trip was too much and Sarah
was laid to rest in St. Helena.
Arriving
in America, now missing his second wife, Judson was unprepared
for the reception he received. It had been 38 years since
he last set foot on American soil. Luther Rice had returned
to America years before and had tirelessly furthered the cause
of supporting foreign missions. Everywhere he went, people
wanted Judson to speak and tell of the work of God in Burma.
While in America, Judson married for a third time. Emily proved
a faithful companion and sister in Christ in the remaining
years of Judson's life when they returned to Burma. Finally,
having laid down his all for Christ, Judson died in April
of 1850 and was buried at sea.
Adonrium
Judson stands as a model of selfless commitment to the cause
of Christ. He was no perfect man as none of us are. When faced
with the loss of his dear Ann and Maria, he slipped into what
would probably be diagnosed as Manic-Depression in another
day. His only counselor was the Holy Spirit and His assurance
in a Sovereign God. He was willing to suffer loss for sake
of what he believed to be true doctrine. He believed firmly
in the Doctrines of Grace, the necessity of the Gospel, and
the power of the conviction of the Holy Spirit.
At
the time of his death there were over 7000 baptized Christians
in Burma along with 63 churches and 123 missionaries and pastors.
His influence was felt far and wide. Through the mission societies
Judson helped establish there were over 2700 missionaries
around the world. Judson's greatest legacy was his undying
love for Christ. While in America someone complained that
Judson didn't tell more thrilling stories of adventure and
intrigue. In reply to that Judson said, "I glad they have
it to say (that I) had nothing better to tell than the wondrous
story of Jesus' dying love."
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1
Adonirum Judson and the Missionary Call by Erroll Hulse,
Reformation Today Trust, 1996, p.6.
2
Hulse, p.7 (The book he read was Human Nature in its Fourfold
State by Thomas Boston).
3
To the Golden Shore by Courtney Anderson, Judson Press,
1989, pp. 63-64.
4
Anderson, p. 83.
5
The Life of Adonirum Judson by Edward Judson, Anson
D.F. Randolph and Company, 1883, p. 36.
6
Judson, p. 39.
7
Judson, p.42.
8
William Carey by Pearce Carey, Wakeman, 1923, p. 266.
9
Hulse, p. 26.
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