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William Carey was an English Baptist missionary to
India. He was born in England in 1761. Pastor before going to the
mission field, he spent an active forty-one years serving the Lord
in India, including translating the Scriptures.
"Shoemaker by trade, but scholar, linguist and
missionary by God's training," William Carey was one of God's giants
in the history of evangelism! One of his biographers, F. Dealville
Walker, wrote of Carey: "He, with a few contemporaries, was almost
singlehanded in conquering the prevailing indifference and hostility to
missionary effort; Carey developed a plan for missions, and printed his
amazing Enquiry; he influenced timid and hesitating men to take
steps to the evangelizing of the world." Another wrote of him, "Taking
his life as a whole, it is not too much to say that he was the greatest
and most versatile Christian missionary sent out in modern times."
Carey was born in a small thatched cottage in Paulerspury, a typical Northamptonshire village in England, August 17,
1761, of a weaver's family. When about eighteen he left the Church of
England to "follow Christ" and to "...go forth unto Him without the
camp, bearing His reproach." At first he joined the Congregational
church at Hackleton where he was an apprentice shoemaker. It was there
he married in 1781. And it was in Hackleton he began making five-mile
walks to Olney in his quest for more spiritual truth. Olney was a
stronghold of the Particular Baptists, the group that Carey cast his lot
with after his baptism, October 5, 1783. Two years later he moved to
Moulton to become a schoolmaster -- and a year later he became pastor of
the small Baptist congregation there.
It was in Moulton that Carey heard the missionary
call. In his own words he cried, "My attention to missions was first
awakened after I was at Moulton, by reading the Last Voyage of
Captain Cook." To many, Cook's Journal was a thrilling
story of adventure, but to Carey it was a revelation of human need! He
then began to read every book that had any bearing on the subject.
(This, along with his language study -- for at twenty-one years of age
Carey had mastered Latin, Greek, Hebrew and Italian, and was turning to
Dutch and French. One well called his shoemaker's cottage "Carey's
College," for as he cobbled shoes along with his preaching he never sat
at his bench without some kind of a book before him.)
The more he read and studied, the more convinced he
was "the peoples of the world need Christ." He read, he made notes, he
made a great leather globe of the world and, one day, in the quietness
of his cobbler's shop -- not in some enthusiastic missionary conference
-- Carey heard the call: "If it be the duty of all men to believe the
Gospel ... then it be the duty of those who are entrusted with the
Gospel to endeavor to make it known among all nations." And Carey sobbed
out, "Here am I; send me!"
To surrender was one thing -- to get to the field was
quite another problem. There were no missionary societies and there was
no real missionary interest. When Carey propounded this subject for
discussion at a ministers' meeting, "Whether the command given to the
apostles to teach all nations was not obligatory on all succeeding
ministers to the end of the world, seeing that the accompanying promise
was of equal extent," Dr. Ryland shouted, "Young man, sit down: when God
pleases to covert the heathen, He will do it without your aid or mine."
Andrew Fuller added his feelings as resembling the unbelieving captain
of Israel, who said, "If the Lord should make windows in heaven, might
such a thing be!"
But Carey persisted. he later said of his ministry, "I
can plod!" And he was a man who "always resolutely determined never to
give up on any point or particle of anything on which his mind was set
until he had arrived at a clear knowledge of his subject."
Thus Carey wrote his famed Enquiry Into the
Obligations of the Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the
Heathen. In this masterpiece on missions Carey answered arguments,
surveyed the history of missions from apostolic times, surveyed the
entire known world as to countries, size, population and religions, and
dealt with the practical application of how to reach the world for
Christ!
And he prayed. And he pled. And he plodded. And he
persisted. And he preached -- especially his epoch-producing message,
"EXPECT GREAT THINGS FROM GOD. ATTEMPT GREAT THINGS FOR GOD." The result
of that message preached at Nottingham, May 30, 1792 -- and all the
other missionary ministries of Carey -- produced the particular Baptist
Missionary Society, formed that Fall at Kettering on October 2, 1792. A
subscription was started and, ironically, Carey could not contribute any
money toward it except the pledge of the profit from his book, The
Enquiry.
It was in 1793 that Carey went to India. At first his
wife was reluctant to go -- so Carey set off to go nevertheless, but
after two returns from the docks to persuade her again, Dorothy and his
children accompanied him. They arrived with a Dr. Thomas at the mouth of
the Hooghly in India in November, 1793. There were years of
discouragement (no Indian convert for seven years), debt, disease,
deterioration of his wife's mind, death, but by the grace of God -- and
by the power of the Word -- Carey continued and conquered for Christ!
When he died at 73 (1834), he had seen the Scriptures
translated and printed into forty languages, he had been a college
professor, and had founded a college at Serampore. He had seen India
open its doors to missionaries, he had seen the edict passed prohibiting
sati (burning widows on the funeral pyres of their dead
husbands), and he had seen converts for Christ.
On his deathbed Carey called out to a missionary
friend, "Dr. Duff! You have been speaking about Dr. Carey; when I am
gone, say nothing about Dr. Carey -- speak about Dr. Carey's God."
That charge was symbolic of Carey, considered by many to be a "unique
figure, towering above both contemporaries and successors" in the
ministry of missions.
A WORD OF PRAYER!
Loving Father, I thank You for the wonderful Word
given to me so that I can inherit the eternal life. Open my eyes to
see the truth in Your Word and give me a heart to obey Your Word.
Give me a heart to take Your Word in every language of this world!
Give me a similar vision that William Carey had when he landed in
India! In Jesus' Name. Amen.
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