The present missionary force in India
represents, according to the “Indian Missionary
Directory,” a body of nearly 2,500 men and women
who have been sent from Europe, America and Australia
to instruct the people in the blessings of our faith.
This body is constantly increasing in numbers and
is sent forth and maintained by some seventy societies.(11)
They are a noble band of Christian workers, of no
less consecration and faith than those in the past,
and of the highest training and broadest culture ever
known.
The missionary furnishes to the home
churches the chief interest in missionary work and
is the link which connects them and the home society
with their enterprise abroad.
His work at present is not what it
once was in India. In earlier days the missionary
had to be a man of all works; every form of missionary
endeavour came under his direction. In mission
work, as in every other line of effort, specialization
has become a feature and a necessity. There must
be men of as varied talents and special lines of training
as there are departments of missionary work.
But every missionary should be preeminently, a
man. He should be a man of large calibre.
There is much danger lest the church become indifferent
to this matter, and send to the mission field inferior
men men who would be unable to stem the
tide of competition and attain success at home.
If a man is not qualified for success in the home
land, there is little chance of his attaining much
usefulness upon the mission field. And an inferior
class of men sent out to heathen lands to represent,
and to conduct the work of, the home church must necessarily
react upon the church through want of success, discouragement
and defeat in the missionary enterprise. A church
whose missionary representatives abroad are wanting
in fitness and power cannot long continue to be a
strenuous missionary church; it will lack fuel to
keep burning the fire of missionary enthusiasm.
And in speaking of the missionary
I include the lady missionary. Missionary ladies
today are more numerous in India than are the men.
More than a thousand single ladies have given themselves
to the missionary life and are labouring with conspicuous
success in that land. They meet almost the same
conditions of life and require the same qualifications
for success as their brother missionaries do.
Of course, in certain details, they differ; but into
such matters I cannot enter at present.
I desire to enumerate the qualifications
of a missionary for highest usefulness in India at
the present time.
1. Physical Fitness.
Is a man physically qualified to be
sent out into missionary work? For an enterprise
like this, where a man practically enlists for life,
it is of much concern to the Society which appoints
him, and of great importance to the work which he
is to take up that he be possessed of good health.
This is preeminently true in the case of all those
who are appointed to India. The climate of India
is trying, though it is neither dangerous nor as fruitful
in difficulty, as many believe. It is not necessary
that a man who is sent out to India be possessed of
robust health. Indeed, I have often noticed that
the most robust are the most likely to yield, through
ill-health, to climatic influences there. This
is chiefly owing to the fact that such people are
usually careless in all things pertaining to health.
They place too much reliance upon their stock of vigour,
and ignore, until too late, the insidious influences
of the tropical sun. We ask not for a man of
great bodily vigour; but he should be possessed of
organic soundness. Such a man may stand the climate
longer and work with fewer interruptions than his
more vigorous brother; simply because he knows that
his health is delicate and appreciates the necessity
of taking suitable care of himself. On the whole,
my experience has led me to two convictions about
this matter; the first is that the less robust and
more careful missionaries stand well that tropical
climate; and in the second place, that to those who
do take adequate care of themselves, the climate of
India is neither dangerous nor insanitary.
There are, however, certain precautions
which missionaries should take in that land in order
to insure the proper degree of efficient service.
Annual periods of rest at hill “sanitaria”
are not only desirable, but are necessary, in order
to preserve the health and add to one’s usefulness.
Many of the best missions in India, at present, not
only arrange that their missionaries take this rest,
but demand it of them. They have learned by experience
that it is a reckless waste of precious power for
their missionaries to continue working upon the hot
plains until compelled by a break-down to seek rest
and restoration. It is much easier, in the tropics,
to preserve, than to restore, health. Many a noble
service has been cut short, and many a useful career
has been spoiled by recklessly continuing work for
a few years without rest or change in that land.
The youngest and the least organized missions, and
consequently those which have not perfected arrangements
for the rest and health of their members, are those
which have the largest number of break-downs, and which
lose most in labour and money on account of the ill
health of their missionaries.
Visits to the home land every eight
or ten years are also desirable, not only for restoration
of physical vigour, but also, for a recementing of
domestic and social ties and for a renewed contact
with and a new inspiration from the Church of God
in the West. Life in all its aspects has a tendency
to degenerate in the tropics; and one needs occasional
returns to northern climes for the blessings which
they alone can give.
Shall the missionary indulge in recreations?
Among missionaries themselves this is a much debated
question. Some maintain that all forms of recreation
are unworthy of a man engaged in this holy calling.
I do not agree with them. I have seen many missionaries
helped in their work by such recreation. There
are some men and women who have no taste for such
diversions. To them they may have little value
or usefulness. But, to the ordinary missionary
who has done a hard day’s work an hour’s
diversion in tennis, badminton or golf has often been
a godsend. It has brought relief to the tense
nerves and a new lease of life to the organs of the
body. In a similar way an interest in carpentry,
in geology, photography, or any other set study, brings
to the jaded mind a diversion and a new lease of power,
and prepares one to go back to his work with fresh
pleasure and renewed enthusiasm.
One should carefully avoid entering
inordinately into any such recreation. There
is danger, and sometimes a serious danger, that such
lines of diversion may be carried to an excess, and
the mind and heart be thereby robbed of, rather than
strengthened for, one’s life-work.
2. His Methods of Life.
There are questions of importance
which come under this consideration and which are
much discussed at the present time. It is asked,
for instance, whether a man should go out as a married,
or as a single, missionary. A few years ago the
American Board showed very decided preference for the
married missionary, and hesitated to send, except under
special circumstances, bachelors. Missionary
societies connected with ritualistic churches, on
the other hand, have given preference, almost exclusive
preference, to the unmarried missionary. At the
present time there is a growing feeling, in all Protestant
denominations, that there is a demand, and a specially
appropriate field of usefulness, both for the married
and the unmarried missionary. The supreme argument
in favour of the married man is connected with the
home influence which he establishes and which, in
itself, is a great blessing to the heathen people among
whom he lives. The light and beauty of a Western
Christian home is always a mighty testimony, not only
to the Gospel, but to the civilization of the West
which is a direct product of the Gospel. Through
the wife is also conserved the health of the husband
who is thereby rendered more efficient. And to
his activity is added her equally beneficent one among
the women of their charge. The missionary home
constitutes a testimony and a power which no mission
can be without.
On the other hand, there is a large
and an attractive field of usefulness which can best
be worked by the unmarried man and woman. There
are forms of activity and lines of self-denial which
can best be met by those who are not tied down by
home life and who are more free to meet the rapidly
changing necessities of certain departments of work.
It is also true that the unmarried life represents
to the Orient that type of self-denial which has always
been associated, in their mind, with the highest degree
of religious attainment; and it may, for this very
reason, be in the line of highest influence upon the
people of the land.
So, married and unmarried life have
in the mission field today their recognized place,
advantage, and sphere of influence. And, working
together they will exemplify to the people those forms
of religious life and activity which bring highest
glory to our cause.
Another question pertains to the missionary’s
daily life. Shall he conform to the ordinary
habits of life practiced by the people among whom he
lives? In other words, shall the missionary from
the West conform to native customs in food and dress?
It is not possible to give a categorical reply to
this question. A country should be studied and
the ideals of the people thoroughly investigated by
the missionary before he decides upon any course of
action in this matter. There are countries where
such conformity would be desirable and would add considerably
to the missionary’s influence and success.
China is such a country; and many of the missionaries
in that land find it to their interest, and to the
interest of the work, to adopt the Chinese costume,
cue and all. They thus cease to appear foreign
and peculiar in a land where to be a foreigner is
to be hated, or at least to be unloved and distrusted
by the people.
The same thing has been tried in India,
not only in clothing, but also to a large extent in
food. Many a missionary, feeling how great a barrier
his foreign habits created between him and the people,
and inspired by a passionate desire to come near to
them in order that he might bless them, has divested
himself of European clothing, adopted the native costume
(at least so far as it was possible for him to do
so) and has confined himself to native food.
But I have never known of any Western missionary who
has continued this method for a long time and declared
it a success. One of the most pathetic instances
on record is that of the famous Jesuit missionary
Abbe Du Bois, who, after a careful study of the situation,
donned the yellow garb of the Hindu monk and became
practically a Hindu to the Hindus, spending most of
his time in travelling from town to town and living
strictly, both as regards food, clothing, and general
habits, as an ordinary Hindu in order that he might
gain close access to the people and thus win many
converts to the Roman Catholic Church. For many
years, in a distinguished missionary career, he followed
this method of life. But was it a success?
In his “Life and Letters,” written at the
close of his missionary life, he frankly confesses
that that method of approach to the people had proved
an entire failure; that he had not thereby gained any
added influence over them or had become better able
to lead them into the Christian fold. He maintains
that, so far as this style of living was concerned,
he had accomplished absolutely nothing for India.
I have known of ardent and able Protestant missionaries
also who have tried the same method, with the same
result, and have returned to their Western costume
and food.
The Salvation Army, at the beginning
of its work a few years ago in India, compelled all
its officers fully to adopt Indian methods of life.
This was enforced, in its rigour, only for a short
time; but for a sufficiently long period to reveal
its disastrous effects upon the health and life of
its European officers. Their system has been considerably
modified, but is still unsatisfactory on the score
of health and usefulness.
It is now recognized by all that the
differences between the natives of tropical India
and the inhabitants of northern climes, and between
the tropical clime and that of the temperate zone,
are so great that we of the Northwest cannot, with
wisdom and impunity, adopt the manners of life of
that people. There are differences so great, both
in clothing and in food, that it would require generations
of acclimatization before the change could be wisely
adopted in its entirety. It is indeed desirable
that the European or American, who goes to live in
the tropics, should change somewhat his diet so as
to meet the changed requirements of his system there.
But, to adopt the native diet is a very different thing,
and will be conducive neither to nourishment nor digestion.
There is, however, another question
of more importance than this and one which seriously
confronted the Abbe Du Bois. What is gained in
accessibility to, and power over, the people by adopting
these native habits? It should be remembered
that Westerners have lived in India so long as to
have become perfectly well known to all the people.
Moreover, the Western garb and habits of life represent
to the Hindu honour, influence, power, and culture.
In his heart of hearts the Hindu highly respects,
and is always ready to listen to, that man of the West
who is true to himself and stands before him for what
he is and for what he teaches. The ordinary Hindu
is not stupid enough to be deceived as to a man’s
nationality or true position in life because of his
change of clothing or food. Indeed, to nine-tenths
of all Hindus, such a change of habits, on the part
of a European, would mean nothing else than that he
had lost caste among his own people and had descended
to a much lower social scale than formerly. It
is well to remember in India that the way of access
to the people is opened to the Westerner not through
such outer changes of life, but through true manifestations
of kindness and love to them. They are quick
to understand the language of love and would never
confound it with outer posings of men who are thereby
seeking to win their favour.
The Rev. Geo. Bowen, of Bombay, was
perhaps one of the most self-denying of all the missionaries
who lived in that land. He reduced the annual
expenses of his living to $150.00. It was in this
path of self-denial that he sought to find greatest
usefulness as a missionary. Of this life he said
at one time: “I have not been wholly disappointed,
but I have not been successful enough to make me feel
like advising any one else to follow my example.
And yet I have not so completely failed as to make
me regret the course which I have pursued. I
have discovered that the gulf which separates the
people of this country is not a social one at all;
it is simply the great impassable gulf which separates
between the religion of Christ and an unbelieving
world.”
It may be laid down as a general principle
of life in that land that the missionary should adopt
that method of life which, while consistent with severe
economy, shall best conduce to health and efficiency
of service among the people.
And in this connection it should also
be stated that there are many things which are perfectly
natural and wise and desirable in the line of self
help in America which should be unnecessary and unwise
in such a land as India. It is a safe rule adopted
by the best missionary workers in that land that a
European should never do those things which can easily
be done by natives in the matter of domestic service.
It would be folly for a missionary man or woman to
spend much time in household work and in similar duties
when there are many people around whose special province
that is, and who can do it for one-thirtieth his own
wage, and who can thus release him for the more serious
and higher duties of life.
Thus, in all these matters, one should
consider fully the whole situation the
character of the climate, of the people, and the conditions
of the best health and efficiency and greatest usefulness
of the missionary worker.
The question as to the length of the
missionary’s service is an important one.
Shall he enter upon it for a definite term or shall
he consider it his life work? In most missions
and societies the missionary service is considered
a life service. It is a service so peculiar in
its training and in its direction; it tends in many
ways so to lead a man away from the atmosphere of
work and direction of activity found at home, that
it is better for him, who undertakes it at all, to
consecrate himself to it as the great mission of his
life. It is also a fact that the longer he continues
in it, the more ability and aptness he acquires for
that special work.
There are, of course, some who will
find that they have mistaken their vocation and that
missionary work does not suit them; or, rather, that
they are not adapted to it. Such people should
make no delay in returning home and in seeking a more
congenial life work.
3. The Intellectual Ability and
Educational Training of the Missionary.
Whatever may have been the case in
the past, the day certainly has come when India demands
only men and women of wide intelligence and thorough
training as missionaries. Whether we regard it
as a land of profound philosophy, and of a marvellously
organized religion; or whether we consider the intellectual
power of many of the natives of that land, the missionary
must be amply prepared, through educational and intellectual
equipment, to meet them. One of the saddest sights
seen in India is a missionary who has absolutely no
interest in the religious philosophy of the land,
and who is not able to appreciate the mutual relations
of that faith and his own and who is unequal to the
task of discussing intelligently with, and of convincing
in, matters of faith, the educated natives of the
country. Such a man apparently did not know that
he would meet in that land many university graduates
who are still believers in, and defenders of, their
ancestral faith. So he finds himself unable to
stand before such men and to give reason for the faith
that is in him so as to satisfy their earnest, intelligent
inquiries, or to quiet their keen opposition.
It should also be remembered that,
in addition to this growing host of natives of university
training and culture, there is a considerable number
of Europeans in government service and in other departments.
They come into constant touch with the missionary,
and gauge his culture and capacity, and are sure to
judge of the missionary work according to their estimate
of his training and qualification.
In such a land, and facing such conditions,
and in the presence of such people, the missionary
should be a man of thorough training and culture,
and should have a mind which has ample command of the
treasures of knowledge which it has acquired.
He should also be able to find interest in various
branches of learning. As I said above, he should,
in some respects, be a man of special training with
definite and high qualifications for the special department
upon which he has entered; but he should also be not
narrow, but of broad sympathies and of a growing interest
in the general realm of culture. He should continue
to cultivate his student tastes, and should grow constantly
in ability and aptitude to grapple with the mighty
problems of the land. He should be able not only
to understand the many aspects of Hinduism and of Buddhism,
which has entered so largely into the Hindu faith,
but he must also know considerable about Mohammedanism,
since it is held by one-fifth of the population of
that land.
It is well that he be thoroughly grounded
in Christian doctrine before he enters upon his missionary
duties. I have known men to enter the mission
field who had not clear views and definite convictions
concerning some of the most essential Christian doctrines;
with the consequence that they drifted away from their
moorings and had to recast their faith, under adverse
circumstances, on the field.
The mission field is no place for
a man to readjust his faith and to discover that his
religious affiliations are not what they ought to be.
It is not a question whether a man’s
theology is of the conservative, or of the progressive,
type. Both types may be needed. It is largely
a question whether he has grasped clearly and with
conviction any doctrine whether
he has thought for himself and appropriated any
system of truth. Or, I should say, whether any
sort of theology has gripped him in its power.
Bishop Thoburn has well said that “the young
missionary should have a clear and well-grounded theology
before going abroad. His views of vital theological
truth should be clear and settled. The Christian
Church of America cannot afford to export doubts or
even religious speculation to foreign fields.
The people of India, and I may add of other lands,
are abundantly able to provide all the doubts and all
the unprofitable speculation that any church will care
to contend with; and one important qualification of
the missionary should be a positive faith as opposed
to doubt, and a clear system of living truth as opposed
to profitless speculation.” Above all, the
missionary should have a working faith in the gospel not
a half-grounded conviction. There may be a place
at home for the unsettled mind; the mission
field is not for such. In India, especially,
while there is ample room and abundant opportunity
and inducement for progress in thought and development
in doctrinal construction, there is no place for destructive
doubts and mental unsettlement. Positive teaching
and not interrogations and destructive doubts should
characterize the missionary. Give us a man who
knows something and is inspired with convictions.
For, it should be remembered, the missionary is preeminently
an instructor. He must give himself to the work
of establishing others in living, satisfying, saving
truth. He is to instruct the people, as a preacher,
in the way of salvation. He is also called upon
to furnish a working equipment of truth to pastors,
preachers and teachers. He should be conversant
with the Bible and with the various theories of interpretation.
He should be possessed of a clear system of theology
and should understand the best methods and principles
of Christian work.
For the attaining of all this, the
missionary must continue as an earnest student, he
must maintain upon the field thorough habits of study.
His missionary life, itself, should be to him, not
only an interpreter of what he formerly studied, but
an incitement to further regular study. Many
temptations overtake the missionary to intellectual
indolence as well as to intellectual dissipation.
He is in danger, under the pressure of other interesting
work and distractions, either not to read anything
very seriously or to read in a haphazard, desultory
way. The latter is specially a dangerous habit
on the mission field. The missionary needs not
only to cultivate habits of study and to devote certain
hours daily, so far as possible, to that habit; he
should, preeminently, keep before him some definite
aim or ideal towards which all his reading should be
directed. If he be specially a preacher, he should
conscientiously and thoroughly prepare his sermons
as if he were to preach to the most cultured audiences;
or, if he instruct his agents, he should make previous,
elaborate preparation for the same.
He should take an intelligent interest
in, and make a thorough study of, the people, their
social and religious customs, their economic conditions,
their educational efforts, their history, these
and many other studies will furnish abundant and abounding
interest to the thoughtful missionary and will add
to his power in his work. In all these respects,
no people on earth are more interesting than those
of India. And for successful spiritual work among
them the missionary needs to study these side issues
more than he would, perhaps, among any other people.
He will find it of much help if he
is apt at acquiring language. A good and usable
knowledge of the vernacular of the people is a most
important avenue of access to their mind and heart.
The acquiring of a living language is a very different
thing from the study of a dead language. A man
may be a success in the one and a failure in the other.
A good ear is of paramount importance in a first-class
facility for acquiring and using a modern vernacular.
I would not say that a man who has
not a good command of the vernacular of a people cannot
be to them a good missionary; for a few of the best
missionaries I know, speak the vernacular wretchedly.
But I do emphasize the fact that proficiency
here is of prime importance and I would also add that
it should be the first work of a missionary after entering
his field. To dawdle with the language the first
year, is, generally speaking, to fail in acquiring
it at all.
Should a young man, who intends to
become a missionary, receive a special preparatory
training for missionary work? Yes, to a certain
extent. I heartily approve of all recent courses
established in theological institutions with a view
to training their students in missionary principles
and literature. And I would that these courses
were much enlarged so as to correspond with the relative
importance of the missionary work. Beyond all
this, I believe that every student, who intends to
become a missionary, should spend time during his last
year or two as a student in special preparation for
his work and field. For instance, it were a great
help to him who is to become a missionary in India
that he study seriously the Sanskrit language and Hindu
philosophy. These two would give him an important
start upon his missionary career and, probably, furnish
him with initial taste for that larger equipment which
is essential to the great missionary. It is of
course understood that the modern science of Comparative
Religion has already had his attention in the general
course of study. Too much emphasis cannot be
placed upon the study of this science as an aid to
the modern missionary.
I would also urge here the importance
of each missionary, so far as his tastes and ability
permit, preparing himself for the work of enriching
the Christian literature of the field and country
of his choice. In India this is becoming a matter,
not only of growing, but also of paramount, importance.
In the past, missionaries have been too much engrossed
with the other departments of work to give themselves
to the production of tracts and books. Much more
must be done in this line in the future. Every
year adds to the need for, and the influence of, a
worthy literary effort expressed in the various vernaculars
of India. The growing host of readers in the
Christian communities and among the non-Christians
is a loud cry for missionary consecration to this
specific work.
There is not one possession or element
of power connected with a thorough education and high
culture which will not become available and most useful
in that interesting land, and which will not be transmuted
into power for the elevation and redemption of that
people.
4. Spiritual Qualifications.
It would hardly seem necessary to
speak on this subject. It must be everywhere
understood that a life of spiritual power is, and must
ever remain, the first requisite of the missionary.
And yet, I fear that the missionary force of today
reveals more serious delinquency at this point than
at any other. If missionaries were asked, wherein
lies the chief hindrance to their work, I believe
they would, all but unanimously, refer to their want
of spiritual power. Not that they are more defective
in this respect than are the ministers at home.
They are a noble band of consecrated men and women.
But they greatly need, and bemoan their need of, a
growing spiritual endowment, the possession of which
would give to them a new joy, and, to the people,
an inexhaustible gift of life, and to the missionary
work a power hitherto unknown.
A man should not go out as a foreign
missionary unless he has a definite call from God
to go. It must be laid so strongly upon his heart
that he feels the necessity of going forth unto the
heathen. There must be a constraining power and
a felt conviction within, that in the mission field
alone can he find rest and peace and power.
The missionary should be a man of
pronounced and positive spirituality a
man who loves the Word of God, who finds meditation
in it sweet, and who finds relief, strength and joy
in frequent daily prayer. The depressing influences
which beset his spiritual life are many. The all-pervasive,
chilling influence of heathenism, and its dead and
deadening ceremonialism tend to exercise an increasing
power over him. He will not, at first, realize
this influence; but as an insidious and an ever swelling
tide of evil it will come into his soul, unless he
is well guarded and daily fortified against it by
frequent communion with God. In India the hardening
influence of the all-surrounding heathenism is as subtle
as it is potent in its influence upon the life of
any Christian worker and needs to be overcome by constant
spiritual culture.
The life of the European Christians
who reside in that country is so far from being Christlike
and is so wanting in these spiritual traits which
should characterize an earnest Christian, that the
missionary constantly has to guard himself against
its influence upon himself.
The loneliness of the missionary his
frequent and long-continued absence from those means
of grace which so largely minister to the spiritual
strength of a pastor in this country is
something deeply felt. Few men realize the extent
of the spiritual helps which the Christian society
of America renders to the aspiring life of a man of
God. In his loneliness, in the far-off land,
the missionary feels its absence keenly.
Moreover, all the native Christians
of the community of which he is the official head
look up to him for inspiration. Is he wanting
in faith, hopefulness and cheer; is he depressed and
discouraged; is he lacking in the power of prayer
and of sweet communion with God? It is marvellous
how quickly this frame of mind is transmitted from
him to the people of his charge. The pastors,
catechists and other mission agents of his field all
look to him for their ideal and seek to draw from him
their inspiration in spiritual life. Is he down;
then they are down with him. In coldness as in
spiritual ardour they faithfully reflect his life and
temper. It is, indeed, true that many of these
live spiritual lives which bring inspiration and spiritual
joy to him. The simplicity and earnestness of
the faith of most of the native Christians is beautiful.
Still, in many respects, he finds the community a
heavy spiritual drain upon him; and, if he is to maintain
himself as a worthy leader in the higher Christian
life, he must live constantly with God and find daily
strength in Him.
In India, specially, there are needed
a few definite spiritual gifts which I desire to emphasize
and which a missionary should aim to cultivate.
The first in order, if not in importance,
is patience. To us of the West the Orient seems
preeminently slow. To them of the East we of the
West rush everything unduly and are the victims of
impatience. There is much truth in that homely
skit of Kipling’s:
“It is bad for the Christian’s peace of
mind
To hustle the Aryan brown;
For the Christian riles but the Aryan smiles,
And it weareth the Christian down.
“And the end of the fight is a tombstone white,
With the name of the late deceased;
And the epitaph drear, a fool lies here
Who tried to hustle the East.”
The ordinary Hindu will endure the
white man’s impatience, and he and the native
Christian will submit to the same weakness on the part
of the missionary. But they fail to understand
it; and the missionary’s power with them is
very largely impaired by the manifestation of this
evil spirit. Even if impatience were ever, anywhere,
a virtue, in India it is always an unmixed evil and
should be guarded against. The warning is the
more needed because the tropical climate itself is
a very bad irritant to the nervous system. Among
the Hindus patience is regarded the supreme virtue
of God and of man; and it should adorn every missionary
who seeks to be their leader.
Humility also is a grace which needs
much cultivation by the missionary. He has constant
temptation to pride. The sin of masterfulness
is naturally his besetting sin; for his influence
over his people and his control in the direction of
his work gradually grow sweet to him and develop, if
he is not very careful, into an imperiousness of will
which is neither pleasant to those who come in contact
with him, nor consistent with the golden grace of
humility, nor in any sense pleasing to God.
Love that essence of divine
character needs preeminent guarding, encouragement
and development on the part of the missionary.
There is so much that is unlovely and unlovable all
about him, so little to attract and draw out his tender
emotions that he needs to drink freely from the fountain
of love above; or he will degenerate very easily into
a hard, cold, unsympathetic, cynical missionary a
frame of mind which will utterly disqualify him for
any joy or power in his work. One of the best
missionaries I have known used to pray very frequently “O
Lord, save me from the sin of despising this people.”
It is a prayer which every missionary may find it
necessary to offer frequently. True Christian
love is none the less necessary, yea the more necessary
on the mission field, because the missionary lives
among people who are not kindred in blood to himself.
Then he needs also a large gift of
faith and of hope. The smallness of the Christian
Church in the midst of a dense mass of heathenism;
the apparent inadequacy of earthly means to convert
that great people to Christ; the slowness of progress
and the fewness of results all these tend
to depress and discourage the worker. And he
needs to offer for himself, as for his people, the
prayer which Elisha offered in behalf of the young
man, “O Lord, I pray thee open his
eyes that he may see. And the Lord opened the
eyes of the young man and he saw and behold the mountain
was full of chariots of fire round about Elisha.”
Spiritual power, in all its forms,
is not only greatly needed by the missionary, it is
also highly appreciated by the people who are always
ready to be led by it. I believe that the people
in the East are much more amenable to this influence
and much more ready to follow spiritual guidance than
are the people of our own land. And this, in itself,
is an added reason for deep spirituality in the missionary.
5. The Missionary’s Attitude
Towards the Non-Christian World.
This attitude is one of considerable
importance to the missionary because it furnishes
largely the motive of his life work. Before one
goes out as a missionary he should acquire some definite
and sound views as to the condition of the non-Christians
who constitute three-fourths of our race. This
means that he must decide as to his missionary motive, what
motive power shall impel him to leave his native land
and go to live among a benighted people surrounded
by a thousand disadvantages.
Since the organization of our missionary
societies less than a century ago there
has been an important change of emphasis in the matter
of missionary motives. The progress, I might
almost say revolution, in theology has worked towards
this change. The recent discovery of new sciences,
and the utilization of the wonderful modern means of
communication whereby a new knowledge of non-Christian
peoples has been made possible to us, has affected
our consideration of the whole problem of missionary
work and has especially modified the missionary motive.
Dr. W. N. Clark, in his admirable book on Christian
Missions, discusses fully this question. “The
difference,” he says, “between our conception
of man today and that of a century ago is mainly not
that something true has fallen out of it, though that
may be the fact with many minds: it is rather
that immeasurably much that is true has been added
to it. Unquestionably our conception of man is
still incomplete, unbalanced and incorrect, but it
certainly has been altered within the century by the
addition of much that must remain in any true conception.
Our knowledge must have experienced true and legitimate
growth and from our present conception of the human
world we can never go back to that which our fathers
held when they began the work of modern missions ...
our thought concerning our fellow-men contains elements
of truth and justice that our fathers knew nothing
of. The best Christian feeling towards the heathen
world today is far more true, righteous, sympathetic,
Christlike, than the feelings of those who were interested
in missions an hundred years ago. But the single
motive which, standing alone, led to the missionary
enterprise has come to be so surrounded by other thoughts
and motives as to lose its relative importance, and
be less available than it then was as a controlling
influence. This is one of the great and significant
causes of the crisis in missions.”
It is not necessarily true that the
paramount motive of a century ago is no longer believed;
but that other motives have grown and reached a commanding
influence as a power in the Christian consciousness
of today. A Christian missionary has indeed changed
his views, for instance, concerning the origin and
character of Hinduism. Through modern enlightenment
and the study of comparative religion no man can go
out as a missionary, even as I was expected to go
less than a quarter of a century ago, with a general
belief that that great religion is entirely of the
devil and is in itself evil and only evil continually.
The missionary of today must discriminate, must study
appreciation and consider historic facts. He
must know that ethnic, and all non-Christian religions,
have had their uses, and that some still have their
uses in the world. They are the expression of
the deepest religious instincts of the human soul.
And they have, especially such a faith as Hinduism,
not a few elements of truth which a missionary should
know no less than he should understand the great evils
which enter as a part of them.
The greatest missionary motive of
today lies in the last commission of our Lord which
emanates from the heart, and reveals the essence of
our religion. His command to his disciples to
go and disciple the nations stands now as the Supreme
Christian Command; and its significance is appreciated
and emphasized today as never before. And so long
as a Church gives increasing emphasis to this, His
greatest commission, it must necessarily be in the
path of duty, of privilege, of blessing and of power.
Above all other missionary motives this must remain
supreme.
And there must go hand in hand with
this loyalty to Christ, a deepening loyalty to Christianity
and a growing appreciation of its uniqueness in the
world. Christianity is not one religion among
many; it stands alone as the soul-satisfying and soul-saving
faith. The scattered lights of other faiths find
here their centre, and all their prophesies find here
fulfillment. The need of Christianity, by all
men, is supreme. Whatever may be said in favour
of other faiths we must say of them that they are,
in many respects, perverted and are inadequate as a
means of salvation.
And in addition to this the missionary
must feel that all non-Christian peoples are in supreme
need of Christ, the Saviour. This fact we cannot
afford to qualify, without, in very truth, cutting
the nerve of missions. When a missionary regards
Christ and His mission and message as only an incident
in the life and need of our race and ceases to acknowledge
that all men need Christ supremely, he had better
give up his work; for his missionary motive has lost
its foundation and his life work has been robbed of
its power.
The missionary is called to go wherever
the Macedonian cry of human need and of spiritual
helplessness is heard. Our Lord’s command
was world-embracing in its extent; it was a discipling
of all nations; it was a call to be witnesses
unto the uttermost parts of the earth.
Shall the missionary go and preach
everywhere the gospel of Christ, whether men invite
him or not? In view of recent events in China
and in other lands some people (and among them are
a few well-meaning Christians) question our duty and
even our right and privilege to carry the gospel to
a people against its will and when it is satisfied
with its own faith. They claim that this restraint
is demanded by true Christian altruism and by the
spirit of Christ. That the day has come when the
Christian Church should thoroughly reconsider the
best methods of missionary approach to such peoples
I readily agree. I also maintain that Protestant
missions should everywhere scrupulously avoid all
Jesuitical methods and political influences and should
always strive to minimize, if not ignore, their political
rights and magnify the spiritual side of their work.
Under these conditions no people has lent an unwilling
ear to the missionary’s message, or, for a long
time, failed to rejoice in his presence and work.
But had missionary societies sent their missionaries
only to those people who invited them, or were prepared
to give them a cordial welcome, where could they have
found work or how achieve the magnificent success of
the last century? Imagine the great missionary
apostle sending messengers in advance to inquire whether
the inhabitants of Lystra and Ephesus, of Thessalonica
and Athens were willing to receive him, and turning
away his face because, forsooth, they were not prepared
to welcome him! The only invitation he did receive
was from Macedonia in a vision. The acceptance
of the invitation brought to him at once opposition
and stripes. Paul said that he knew that
bonds awaited him wherever he went. But that did
not deter him.
Had our Lord Himself considered the
attitude of man towards Himself He would never have
come down to men. He came to fling fire upon the
earth to bring not peace but a sword.
He was despised and rejected of men. Like Him,
missionaries must consider the deep spiritual need
and not the desire of a people. Above
all, they must be assured everywhere, in their great
life work, that they are sent by God rather than invited
by men.
6. The Relationship Which the
Missionary Sustains to the Missionary Society and
the Churches Which Support Him.
The relationship into which a man,
who becomes a missionary, enters with the missionary
society and the churches is a very precious one, and
should be fully realized. In a peculiar sense
he has become their adopted child the subject
of their prayer and the object of their pride.
They have taken him into their own heart and his support
and success are their peculiar concern.
He is the connecting link between
them and the work which they support and cherish in
the far-off land. Whatever of interest, of joy
and of responsibility they possess in that work passes
through him. He is to them the channel through
which flow their endeavours. He is the living
embodiment of their interest in the work as also of
their effort to bring the heathen to Christ.
And in like manner he has become to them the articulate
cry of the heathen world for help. He represents
to them at the same time both the progress of the
work, its need and the claims of a heathen world upon
them. He is their agent to develop and inspire
their infant Mission Church. He is also the almoner
of their benevolence.
In all these capacities it is well
that he remember, constantly, how much he depends
for inspiration as for support upon those who have
sent him forth to the heathen and who, under God,
sustain him and his work. He should cultivate
full appreciation of their endeavour; he should keep
himself in living, loving touch with both society and
churches; and he should deem it his duty and privilege
to furnish them with all light and intelligence concerning
his work. It is thus that he must strengthen their
faith and inspire their hearts in the great and far-off
work which they are maintaining. It is his opportunity
to add fuel to the ardor and enthusiasm of all the
churches in the missionary endeavour. In this
he has an important function to perform and should
endeavour to magnify his office.
In my opinion the relationship between
the missionary and those whom he represents at home
might easily be strengthened and improved by added
recognition and courtesy to him in the home-land.
At present the foreign missionary of the congregational
churches is simply regarded as their paid agent.
This relationship is indeed a pleasant and a cordial
one. The American Board is most appreciative
of the labors of its missionary agents and deals with
them generously. The churches also give them a
cordial welcome and a warm hearing. But the missionary
has no status whatever beyond this. He returns
for a furlough to the home-land and feels himself,
in a peculiar sense, a stranger. He has no official
connection whatever with his society; his voice is
not heard in its councils; his wisdom and experience
are not sought in its deliberations. In other
words, though possessed of a large stock of knowledge
which might be of value to the Board in the shaping
of its policy and in the direction of its work at its
annual meetings, he has absolutely no voice or place
there and stands apart from its organization, beyond
the privilege of being its foreign servant. The
missionary body has felt this deprivation and isolation
during critical periods in the history of the Board;
and it still feels that, at least some of its number
should be permitted both to enjoy the honour, and
also to render the service incident to being corporate
members of the Board.
The situation is no better in his
relation to the home churches. He is a member,
probably, of some church in the home-land; but, upon
his return home he has no status whatever in any Conference
or Association, or as a member of a Ministerial body
among his home brethren. In his deputation work
at home he finds welcome, as a stranger or as an outsider,
and not as a member or as an integral part of any
body or Association.
The position of the missionary is
different among the Methodists. Every minister
of that body finds that, by becoming a foreign missionary
he does not separate himself from home ties and privileges.
His ministerial connection is preserved intact, so
that he has a status in the churches and in the missionary
society.
7. The Missionary and the Mission To Which He
Belongs.
When a man becomes a member of a foreign
mission he soon realizes that he has become a part
of a compact organization. All its members are
bound together by the warmest ties of friendship and
love. Largely separated from the world and knit
together by common purpose as by all their highest
ambitions, they verily become a big family whose love
increases as the years multiply, and among whom the
spirit of dissension can only create the deepest sorrow
and greatest bitterness. It is, therefore, of
the utmost importance that every one who becomes a
missionary should be a man of peace; should know how
to live in harmony with all his brethren. He
should cultivate that spirit and should aim to see
eye to eye with those who are thus so intimately connected
with him. In loving sympathy they should unite
in the serious concerns of their life-work. One
of the first requisites demanded from a missionary
applicant from the American Board is that he be of
a peaceable disposition able to live harmoniously
with others. And it is not only a suggestion
that should be heeded by every missionary; it is also
a rule which should be enforced by every missionary
society.
Each mission has behind it a history,
and, before it, more or less of an aim and policy.
It should be the ambition of every member of that mission
to study and honour the one, and to be faithful and
loyal to the other. The history of most missions
in India is precious and full of instruction.
They have sainted heroes and most interesting traditions.
The missionary should not only study the records of
his own mission and draw from them every possible
lesson for his life; he should also enter heartily
into the spirit of the mission and endeavour cordially
to bring himself en rapport with its highest
wisdom, deepest purposes and most cherished schemes
for the future. It is not necessary that he be
satisfied with all that the mission has done; he should
also aim, in the spirit of humility and of patience,
to constitutionally influence his brethren to his own
new views and better way of thinking, if he have any.
Above all, he should aim to conserve rather than to
destroy. The blessings of the past should be
utilized in attaining higher things for the future.
Revolutionary methods are ill-adapted to add blessing
to such a work. It should also be the aim of
the missionary to so further the work of his mission
that it may soon cease to be a necessity. A mission,
at best, is but a temporary thing. It should
constantly aim to so nourish and strengthen the native
church as to make itself unnecessary. And it
should be the aim of the missionary to hasten, with
all speed, this consummation.
8. The Relation of the Missionary
to the People Among Whom He Lives.
Having entered upon his work and settled
among the people of his choice, he must seek to realize
the best possible relation to them. This relationship
will be a varied one.
He must be a leader of the Christian
community. In India, today, there is special
need for missionaries who are born leaders. The
people of that land are defective in the power of
initiative; but they are most tractable and docile.
They love to follow a bold and a wise leader of men.
And the missionary, from the very necessity of his
position, should be able to direct and guide the Christian
community into ways of holiness and of Christian activity.
He is to be a leader of leaders. He should marshal
the mission agents connected with him in such a way
as to lead the native Church into highest usefulness
and most earnest endeavour for the salvation of souls.
He should be strong as an organizer
and administrator. In missions the word organization
is becoming the keyword of the situation. There
is no danger of over-organization, so long as the
organization is endowed with life and does not degenerate
into machinery. The best organized activities
of today are the most powerful and the most useful.
And the missionary will find his highest powers for
organization taxed to the utmost in his missionary
work. And as an administrator there will be made
many claims upon him daily. I know of few qualifications
that are more essential to the highest success on
the mission field than conspicuous ability to organize
and wisdom to administer the affairs of a mission.
Missionaries frequently fail at this point and need
therefore to strengthen themselves in this particular.
A missionary should be as much the
conserver of the good as a destroyer of the evil which
he finds among the people. Much of that which
he will see in India, for instance, will at first,
and perhaps for a long time, seem strange and outlandish
to him; but let him not decide that it is therefore
evil. The life of the Orient is built on different
lines from that of the Occident. Many things
in common life, in domestic economy and in social
customs will, and must, be different there from what
they are here. Their civilization, though different
from ours, has a consistency as a whole; and we cannot
easily eliminate certain parts and substitute for them
those of our own civilization without dislocating
the whole. Therefore, it is often safer and better
to conserve what seems to us the lesser good of their
civilization than to introduce what seems the greater
good of our own.
The missionary must be careful to
distinguish between those things which are real, and
those which are apparent, evils among the customs of
the people. There are some customs, such as are
connected with the degradation of woman and heathen
ceremonies which are fundamentally wrong and must be
opposed always. There are others which seem uncouth
and unworthy, but which are devoid of moral or religious
significance. Of two missionaries, the one who
studies to utilize the existing good among the habits
of the people will find greatest usefulness.
Some waste their time, destroy their influence and
minimize their usefulness by a destructive way of attacking
everything that is not positively good and beating
their head against every wall of custom.
The missionary should be a prophet
to rebuke and to condemn evil. He will find numberless
evils on all sides of him in Church, in
general society and in individual life among the people.
He must not hesitate to use constantly his voice as
a protest against all forms of evil. This duty
is the more incumbent upon him as there are none among
the people to protest and to denounce the most flagrant,
demoralizing and universal evils of the land.
One of the most discouraging things concerning the
situation in India is, not the universality of certain
evils, but the utter absence of those who dare to
withstand them and denounce them as sins before all
the people. Missionaries have done more in that
land to rightly characterize certain gross evils and
to call the attention of the people to them than have
any other people in the land. And they have recognition
for this. And this prophetic function of the
missionary must be exercised with increasing faithfulness
for the good of the land and for the purity of the
Church of God.
In that country the missionary must
also stand before the people as their exemplar.
He must represent, not only Christianity at its best,
but also the civilization of the West in its purest
and most attractive garb. India has always greatly
needed such human types of nobility of character to
encourage and stimulate the people to a higher life.
With all modesty and due humility the missionary is
called upon just as much to live as he is to teach
the best that is found in his religion and in the civilization
of his mother country. In India, the life of
the missionary has spoken more loudly than his words.
There are millions in that land today, who, while
they deny and reject the teaching of the missionary,
give him unstinted praise both for what he is and
for what he has done for the country.
The testimony of Sir William Mackworth
Young, Lieutenant-Governor of Punjab is only one of
many such; “I take off my hat to the
humblest missionary that walks a bazaar in India,”
he said, in a recent public address, “because
he is leading a higher and a grander life and doing
a grander work than any other class of persons who
are working in India. If the natives of India
have any practical knowledge of what is meant by Christian
charity, if they know anything of high, disinterested
motives and self-sacrifice, it is mainly from the
missionary that they learn it. The strength of
our position in India depends more largely upon the
good-will of the people than upon the strength and
number of our garrisons, and for that good-will we
are largely indebted to the kindly, self-sacrificing
efforts of the Christian missionary. It is love
which must pave the way for the regeneration of India
as well as for the consolidation of England’s
power.”
The missionary must never lose this
crown of glory in India. He must hold it most
precious and strive to add to the glory which he thus
reflects upon his Faith in that land.