“Call upon me in the
day of trouble: I will
deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me”
(Psa
50:15).
IN THE summer of 1908 I was obliged
to return to Canada with five of our children, leaving
Mr. Goforth in China for the revival work.
Reaching Toronto, I learned that my
eldest son was at death’s door from repeated
attacks of rheumatic fever. He was then almost
a day’s journey away. On my way there,
as I recalled the times in which he had been given
back to us from the very gates of death, my faith was
strengthened to believe for his recovery again.
But, as I prayed, it became very clear that the answer
to my petition depended on myself; in other words,
that I must yield myself and my will to God.
I had been planning to take no meetings
during that furlough, but to devote myself wholly
to my children. I confessed the sin of planning
my own life, and definitely covenanted with the Lord
that if he would raise my son for his service I would
take meetings, or do anything, as he opened the way
for the care of the children.
There were six difficult doors, however,
that would have to be opened not one, but
all before I could possibly go out and speak
for Christ and China, as God seemed to be asking.
First, the Lord would need to restore my son to complete
health, as I could never feel justified in leaving
a sick child. Second, he would need to restore
my own health, for I had been ordered to the hospital
for an operation. Third, he would need to keep
all the other children well. Fourth, a servant
must be sent to take care of the house though
my income was so small that a servant seemed out of
the question, and only the strictest economy was making
both ends meet. Fifth, a Christian lady would
need to be willing to take care of the children, and
act as my housekeeper in my absence from home.
Sixth, sufficient money would need to be sent to meet
the extra expenses incurred by my leaving home.
Yet, as I laid these difficulties
before the Lord, I received the definite assurance
that he would open the way.
My son was brought back to Toronto
on a stretcher, the doctor not allowing him to raise
his head; but on arrival he would not obey orders,
declaring that he was so well he could not and would
not remain still. Fearing the consequences of
his disobeying orders, I telephoned for the doctor
to come at once. On his arrival he gave the lad
a thorough examination, and then said: “Well,
I cannot make him out; all I can say is, let him do
as he pleases.”
Within a month the boy was going back
to his high school, apparently quite well. Some
months later he applied for a position as forester
under the government. He had to pass through the
hands of the official doctor. My son told him
of his recent illness, and of what the doctor had
said concerning his heart; but this physician replied:
“In spite of all you have told me I can discover
nothing whatever the matter with you, and will therefore
give you a clear bill of health.”
As for myself, I did not go to the
hospital; for all the symptoms that had seemed to
require it left me, and I became perfectly well.
A servant was sent to me who did her work sympathetically,
as helping me to do the Lord’s work. A
married niece, living near, offered to stay in the
home whenever I needed to be absent.
And so there remained but one condition
unfulfilled the money. But I believed
this would come as I went forward; and it did.
Each month that followed, as I made up my accounts,
I found that my receipts exceeded my expenditures
sufficiently to enable me to spend money for work in
China, and to purchase things which I needed for China,
including an organ. All these accounts were laid
before our beloved Mission Board secretary, who approved
them.
Under these circumstances I dared
not refuse invitations to speak. Yet, so weak
was my faith, for months I never left home for a few
days without dreading lest something should happen
to the children during my absence. I even accepted
meetings with the proviso that if the children needed
me I must fail to keep my appointment. But as
the days and weeks and months passed, and all went
well, I learned to trust.
“‘Be still; be
strong to-day.’
But, Lord, to-morrow?
What of to-morrow, Lord?
Shall there be rest from toil,
Be truce from sorrow?
’Did I not die for thee?
Do I not live for thee?
Leave me to-morrow.’”
In giving the following I wish to
make clear that, had I been living a life of ease
or self-indulgence, I could not have been justified
in expecting God to undertake for me in such matters
as are here recorded. It must be remembered that
I had stepped out into a life which meant trusting
for everything.
Before leaving China for Canada my
husband had said to me: “Do not stint the
children with apples; give them all they want.”
But when I began housekeeping I found this was not
very easy to do. Apples were expensive, and the
appetites of my six children for them seemed insatiable.
However, I began by buying a few small baskets; and
then I did not need to buy more, for apples came in
a most wonderful way. First in baskets; then,
as the season advanced, in barrels. These came
from many different sources; and in some cases long
distances, express paid to the door. On one occasion
a barrel of large, hard “Greenings” came
just as we had finished the last barrel. The children
complained that they were too hard to eat, and begged
me to buy them some “Snows” very
expensive, but delicious apples for eating. I
had only purchased one small basket of “Snows”
when a large supply, almost a barrelful, came from
a distant friend.
I feel that the Lord saw that I had
given up all for him, so just showed how he could
provide, thus evidencing his love and care for my dear
children. We had set up housekeeping at the end
of the fruit season, and so I had not been able to
do canning for winter use. That winter, again
and again, gifts of canned fruit came, sometimes from
unknown sources. Altogether, seventy jars of
the finest fruit were sent to us. I will give
the details of just one of these gifts.
Shortly before leaving home for ten
days, the servant informed me that the canned fruit
was finished. Accordingly, I went down and ordered
enough dried fruit to last till I should return.
On reaching home I was greeted at the door by a rush
from the children, all trying at once to tell me that
a lovely valentine had just arrived. Leading me
back to the kitchen, they showed me the table covered
with twenty jars of the most delicious looking fruit,
and a large can of maple syrup. On a card accompanying
the gift was written: “A valentine for our
dear ’substitute in China,’ from her sisters
in Renfrew.”
Early in the winter it became evident
that a telephone was a necessity, with my numerous
calls and engagements. I hesitated about going
into this expense, not being quite sure that it was
right to use in that way the money given me.
At last, I prayed that the Lord would show me his
will in the matter by sending me half the amount needed
for the telephone within a certain time, if it was
right for me to get it. Before the time expired
the money had come; so I got the telephone.
As the weather became cold I began
to suffer on the long drives in the country to appointments,
and was soon longing for a fur coat. I consulted
our mission secretary as to whether, if sufficient
money were given me, I could put it into a fur coat.
The answer was a decided “Yes.” There
was no doubt that the coat was a necessity in the Lord’s
work. So I began to pray the Lord to send the
money quickly, for the cold was severe. In less
than two weeks I received the money needed, and of
course got the coat.
The ladies of the Winnipeg Presbyterial
had arranged a series of meetings for me in Winnipeg,
Brandon, and other places in that vicinity, about
ten in all. The collections from the meetings
were to defray my traveling expenses, which would
amount to over one hundred dollars. On my way
by train from Toronto to Winnipeg I caught a severe
cold, which settled in my throat and chest. I
did not want the women to be disappointed, and also
put to all the expense, if I failed them. Just
before reaching Winnipeg I was enabled to commit myself
definitely into the Lord’s hands, for strength
and voice for the meetings. The days that followed
can never be forgotten, for the bodily weakness, fever,
and throat trouble were removed only while I was giving
my addresses. In each case, though so hoarse
before and after speaking as to be scarcely able to
make myself heard above a whisper, my voice cleared
for the address.
For example: while at Dr. and
Mrs. C. W. Gordon’s home the Sunday I was to
speak in Winnipeg, I was advertised to speak that night
in Dr. Gordon’s church. At the supper table
I asked Dr. Gordon if he would be ready to speak should
I fail. Just before my time came to speak I slipped
up on to the platform behind Dr. Gordon, who was praying;
and oh, how I cried to the Lord for help and courage!
For the church was packed, and even the Sunday-school
room partitions were opened to accommodate the crowd.
My throat was as if in a vise, and I felt weak and
ill. But, as Dr. Gordon introduced me, I stepped
forward possessed by a feeling of wonderful calm and
absolute confidence. It seemed I could just feel
One like unto the Son of man beside me, and never had
I felt so completely and only a channel. For more
than an hour I spoke so that every one heard distinctly;
but when I sat down my throat tightened as before.
Dr. Gordon told me later that he had a man sit in
the most difficult place in which to hear, and that
he had heard every word.
So it was till the end of my appointments.
On the homeward journey I asked the Lord either to
heal my throat, or to provide a way for me to get
a needed rest from speaking, for I had many appointments
awaiting me in Ontario. A few days after reaching
home four of my children were taken down with measles.
During the weeks I was in quarantine with them my
throat received the rest it needed, and became quite
restored.
One day the following early summer,
in looking over the children’s clothes, I found
there was so much to be done I was fairly overwhelmed.
I saw it was quite impossible to do the necessary sewing
and keep my appointments too. The question that
weighed heavily was, “Should I cancel the meetings
for which I had given my word?” My husband urged
me to buy ready-made clothes, but I knew how expensive
they would be, and could not bring myself to do so.
I went alone and laid my burden before the Lord, praying
that, if he wanted me to speak further for China, he
would show his will by sending me some gift that would
enable me to get ready-made clothes for the children.
A few days later I was speaking at
a Presbyterial gathering in western Ontario.
At the close of the evening meeting an old gentleman
put into my hands some money. I asked him what
he wished me to use it for, and he replied, “For
your children. Use it in a way that will help
you to be free for God’s work.” My
heart rose in thanksgiving, and I decided to accept
it as the token I had asked of the Lord. On my
return to Toronto I spent this gift in buying ready-made
clothes for the children, to save my time and strength
for the Lord’s work.
When busy in my home one day, the
thought of two dear friends of the China Inland Mission
kept coming constantly to mind, and I began to wonder
if I should not send them some money. Looking
into my purse, I found I had only fifty cents on hand.
I put the matter out of my mind, with the thought
that if the Lord wanted me to send them anything he
would provide a way. That afternoon’s mail
brought a letter from a distant place in Ontario where,
a year before, I had visited and spoken for a friend.
The letter was from the treasurer of the Christian
Endeavor Society for which I had spoken. He enclosed
five dollars, and said the money was to have been
given me at the time I spoke for them, but had been
overlooked.
My first thought was to return it,
as it would be dishonoring my friend to accept money
for such a service; and then I remembered my friends
for whom I wanted money, and I decided to send the
five dollars to them. My husband, returning the
following morning, handed me another five to put with
it, and the ten dollars was sent off.
In due course a reply came from my
friends, saying that the very morning my letter arrived
they both had been given assurance that a certain sum
would come, for which they had been praying. This
was to meet a need which they did not wish to bring
before their Board. My letter brought the ten
dollars; and another letter in the afternoon’s
mail contained a sum which, with mine, exactly made
the amount they had been asking the Lord for.
“Say not my soul, ‘Can
God relieve my care?’
Remember that Omnipotence hath servants
everywhere!”
On one occasion, when about to leave
home on a ten days’ trip to Montreal and other
places, word came that the children’s Sunday-school
treat was to take place during my absence.
Little Mary had no “best”
dress for the occasion. I had planned to make
her a white woolen dress, but now there was no time;
and I knew I could not make it while away, with so
many meetings ahead. But, that very day, a lady
from our church called and said she had wanted for
a long time to help me, and asked if she could do
any sewing for me. With dim eyes and a grateful
heart I accepted her offer. On my return, Mary
told me of her wearing a pretty white cloth dress
for the Sunday-school treat.
Once more we planned to leave Canada
for China, and a serious problem faced me. Our
eldest son could be left to face the world alone, but
not our daughter of sixteen. It was necessary
that a suitable guardian be found for her. I
called on three different ones whom I thought would
feel some responsibility toward the missionary’s
daughter, but all three declined to accept the responsibility.
I then saw that it was not for me to try to open doors,
but for this also I must look to the Lord. I
prayed that, if he wished me to return to China, he
would send me one to whom I could commit her.
A short time passed; then a lady called,
whose life had been devoted to the training of young
women. Her beautiful Christian character made
her the one above all others in whose care I could
gladly leave my daughter. This lady told me that
in her early years she had hoped to give her life
for service in China, but the way had been closed.
She now felt that the Lord had laid it upon her heart
to offer to take charge of my child. Years have
passed since then, and she has fulfilled my highest
expectations of her. Rarely has a more definite
answer come from a loving Father, nor one that brought
greater relief and help; for this offer, coming as
it did in answer to my prayers, seemed to be unmistakable
proof that the Lord would keep my child as I gave her
up.
The time had almost arrived for beginning
the last preparations for the long journey to China,
when one day Ruth came in from her play with her heavy
coat almost in shreds, she having in some way torn
it on a barbed wire fence. The coat was the only
heavy one she had, and I had planned to make it do
for the ocean voyage, intending to get a new one in
England. I tried to find a new one in the stores,
but the season was past and I could not; and I had
no time to make another. I just took the need
to the Lord and left it there, believing that in some
way he would provide. A few days later a friend
telephoned me that her mother had recently returned
from a visit to Chicago, and wished me to come over
to see a parcel she had brought for me. Oh, the
relief that came when I found that the parcel contained,
among other things, a handsome red cloth ulster, which
fitted Ruth perfectly. This fresh evidence of
the Lord’s overshadowing care touched me deeply.
Those who have never known such tokens of the Lord’s
loving care in the little things of life can scarcely
understand the blessedness that such experiences bring.
“Whether it be so heavy
that others cannot bear
To know the heavy burden they cannot come
and share;
Whether it be so tiny that others cannot
see
Why it should be a burden, and seem so
real to me,
Either and both I lay them down at the
Master’s feet
And find them alone with Jesus mysteriously
sweet.”
As I attempt to recall the answers
to prayer on this furlough, so many come to mind it
is impossible to record them all help in
keeping my appointments, courage and power for public
speaking, physical strength, and guidance in facing
many difficult problems.
It was at this time I formed a habit
of getting a message for a meeting on my knees.
It often seemed to me very wonderful how, as in a flash,
sometimes, an outline for a talk on China would come.
Never having kept notes, nor even outlines of addresses,
I have frequently been placed in circumstances when
I have felt utterly cast on the Lord. And I can
testify that he never failed to give the needed help,
and the realized divine power. Yet sad, sad is
it that often at just such times, no sooner would
the address be ended than the Satan-whispered thought
would come, “I have done well to-day.”
Oh, is not the goodness and forbearance
of our God wonderful; wonderful that he ever again
would deign to give help when asked for it?
A short time since I asked a dear
friend whose writings have reached and inspired multitudes
throughout the Christian world: “How did
you do it?”
Softly, with deep reverence in look
and tone, she replied: “It has been done
all in and through prayer!”
With deepest gratitude and praise
to our ever faithful God, I too can testify that any
little service I have been able to do has been done
by his grace in answer to prayer.
“I stood amazed and
whispered, ’Can it be
That he hath granted all the boon I sought,
How wonderful that he for me hath wrought!’
Oh, faithless heart! he said
that he would hear,
And proved his promise, wherefore didst
thou fear?
How wonderful if he should fail to bless
Expectant prayer with good success!”