A SOMEWHAT different though not less
manifest answer to prayer was vouchsafed early in
the year 1859. My dear wife was brought very low
by illness, and at last all hope of recovery seemed
gone. Every remedy tried had proved unavailing;
and Dr. Parker, who was in attendance, had nothing
more to suggest. Life was ebbing fast away.
The only ground of hope was that GOD might yet see
fit to raise her up, in answer to believing but submissive
prayer.
The afternoon for the usual prayer
meeting among the missionaries had arrived, and I
sent in a request for prayer, which was most warmly
responded to. Just at this time a remedy that
had not yet been tried was suggested to my mind, and
I felt that I must hasten to consult Dr. Parker as
to the propriety of using it. It was a moment
of anguish. The hollow temples, sunken eyes,
and pinched features denoted the near approach of
death; and it seemed more than questionable as to whether
life would hold out until my return. It was nearly
two miles to Dr. Parker’s house, and every moment
appeared long. On my way thither, while wrestling
mightily with GOD in prayer, the precious words were
brought with power to my soul, “Call upon Me
in the day of trouble: I will deliver thee, and
thou shall glorify Me.” I was at once enabled
to plead them in faith, and the result was deep, deep,
unspeakable peace and joy. All consciousness
of distance was gone. Dr. Parker cordially approved
of the use of the means suggested, but upon arriving
at home I saw at a glance that the desired change
had taken place in the absence of this or any other
remedy. The pinched aspect of the countenance
had given place to the calmness of tranquil slumber,
and not one unfavourable symptom remained to retard
recovery to health and strength.
Spared thus in answer to prayer the
loss of my own loved one, it was with added sympathy
and sorrow that I felt for Dr. Parker, when, in the
autumn of the same year, his own wife was very suddenly
removed. It being necessary for the doctor to
return at once with his motherless children to Glasgow,
temporary arrangements had to be made for the conduct
of the Mission Hospital in Ningpo, for which he alone
had been responsible. Under these circumstances
he requested me to take up the work, at least so far
as the dispensary was concerned. After a few days’
waiting upon the LORD for guidance, I felt constrained
to undertake not only the dispensary work, but also
that of the hospital; relying solely upon the faithfulness
of a prayer-hearing GOD to furnish the means required
for its support.
The funds for the maintenance of the
hospital had hitherto been supplied by the proceeds
of the doctor’s foreign medical practice; and
with his departure these ceased. But had not
GOD said that whatever we ask in the Name of the LORD
JESUS shall be done? And are we not told to seek
first the kingdom of GOD, not means to advance it,
and that all these things shall be added to us?
Such promises were surely sufficient. Eight days
before entering upon this responsibility I had not
the remotest idea of ever doing so; still less could
friends at home have anticipated it. But the
LORD had foreseen the need, and already funds were
on the way to supply it.
At times there were not less than
fifty in-patients in the hospital, besides a large
number who daily attended the out-patient department.
Thirty beds were ordinarily allotted to free patients
and their attendants; and about as many to opium-smokers,
who paid for their board while being cured of the
habit. As all the wants of the sick in the wards
were supplied gratuitously, in addition to the remedial
appliances needed for the out-patient work, the daily
expenses were considerable; besides which, a number
of native attendants were required, involving their
support.
When Dr. Parker handed the hospital
over to me he was able to leave money that would meet
the salaries and working expenses of the current month,
and little more. Being unable to guarantee their
support, his native staff retired; and then I mentioned
the circumstances to the members of our little church,
some of whom volunteered to help me, depending, like
myself, upon the LORD; and they with me continued to
wait upon GOD that in some way or other He would provide
for His own work. Day by day the stores diminished,
and they were all but exhausted when one day a remarkable
letter reached me from a friend in England which contained
a cheque for L50. The letter stated that the sender
had recently lost his father, and had inherited his
property; that not desiring to increase his personal
expenditure, he wished to hold the money which had
now been left to him to further the LORD’S work.
He enclosed the L50, saying that I might know of some
special need for it; but leaving me free to use it
for my own support, or in any way that the LORD might
lead me; only asking to know how it was applied, and
whether there was need for more.
After a little season of thanksgiving
with my dear wife, I called my native helpers into
our little chapel, and translated to them the letter.
I need not say how rejoiced they were, and that we
together praised GOD. They returned to their
work in the hospital with overflowing hearts, and
told out to the patients what a GOD was ours; appealing
to them whether their idols had ever helped them so.
Both helpers and patients were blessed spiritually
through this remarkable provision, and from that time
the LORD provided all that was necessary for carrying
on the institution, in addition to what was needed
for the maintenance of my own family, and for sustaining
other branches of missionary work under my care.
When, nine months later, I was obliged through failure
of health to relinquish this charge, I was able to
leave more funds in hand for the support of the hospital
than were forthcoming at the time I undertook it.
But not only were pecuniary supplies
vouchsafed in answer to prayer many lives
were spared; persons apparently in hopeless stages
of disease were restored, and success was given in
cases of serious and dangerous operations. In
the case of one poor man, whose legs were amputated
under very unfavourable circumstances, healthy action
took place with such rapidity that both wounds were
healed in less than two weeks. And more permanent
benefits than these were conferred. Many were
convinced of the truth of Christianity; not a few sought
the LORD in faith and prayer, and experienced the
power of the Great Physician to cure the sin-sick
soul. During the nine months above alluded to
sixteen patients from the hospital were baptized,
and more than thirty others became candidates for
admission into one or other of the Christian churches
in the city.
Thus the year 1860 began with openings
on all hands, but time and strength were sadly too
limited to admit of their being used to the best advantage.
For some time the help of additional workers had been
a much-felt need; and in January very definite prayer
was made to the LORD of the harvest that He would
thrust forth more labourers into this special portion
of the great world-field. Writing to relatives
at home in England, under date of January 16th, 1860,
I thus expressed the deep longing of our hearts:
Do you know any earnest, devoted
young men desirous of serving GOD in China,
who not wishing for more than
their actual support would be willing
to come out and labour here? Oh, for four or
five such helpers! They would probably begin to
preach in Chinese in six months time; and
in answer to prayer the necessary means
for their support would be found.
But no one came to help us then; and
under the incessant physical and mental strain involved,
in the care of the hospital during Dr. Parker’s
absence, as well as the continued discharge of my other
missionary duties, my own health began rapidly to
fail, and it became a serious question as to whether
it would not be needful to return to England for a
time.
It was hard to face this possibility.
The growing church and work seemed to need our presence,
and it was no small trial to part from those whom
we had learned so truly to love in the LORD. Thirty
or forty native Christians had been gathered into
the recently organised church; and the well-filled
meetings, and the warm-hearted earnestness of the converts,
all bespoke a future of much promise. At last,
however, completely prostrated by repeated attacks
of illness, the only hope of restoration seemed to
lie in a voyage to England and a brief stay in its
more bracing climate; and this necessity, painful
though it seemed at the time, proved to be only another
opportunity for the manifestation of the faithfulness
and loving care of Him “who worketh all things
after the counsel of His own will.”
As heretofore, the LORD was present
with His aid. The means for our journey were
supplied, and that so liberally that we were able to
bring with us a native Christian to assist in translation
or other literary work, and to instruct in the language
such helpers as the LORD might raise up for the extension
of the Mission. That He would give us fellow-labourers
we had no doubt; for we had been enabled to seek them
from Him in earnest and believing prayer for many months
previously.
The day before leaving China we wrote
as follows to our friend W. T. Berger, Esq., whom
we had known in England, and who had ever strengthened
our hands in the LORD while in that distant land:
“We are bringing with us a young
Chinese brother to assist in literary work, and I
hope also in teaching the dialect to those whom the
LORD may induce to return with us.”
And throughout the voyage our earnest
cry to GOD was that He would overrule our stay at
home for good to China, and make it instrumental in
raising up at least five helpers to labour in the province
of CHEH-KIANG.
The way in which it pleased the LORD
to answer these earnest and believing prayers, and
the “exceeding abundantly” with which He
crowned them, we shall now sketch in brief outline.