TO MY CLASSMATES IN THEOLOGY.
Dear brethren in Christ: Few
periods of our lives can be called to mind with so
much ease and distinctness, as the years which we spent
together in theological studies. The events of
that short season, and the sentiments we then indulged,
are clothed with a freshness and interest which the
lapse of time cannot efface.
Among the questions that occupied
our thoughts, no one perhaps was so absorbing, or
attended with such deep and anxious feeling, as that
which respected the field of labor to which each should
devote his life. And many of us then, I remember,
made a mutual engagement, that if spared and permitted
for years to labor in different portions of the vineyard
of the Lord, we would communicate to each other our
mature views in regard to the claims of different
fields.
Thirteen years have elapsed; and I
propose to fulfil my engagement, by expressing, in
the form of the present little volume, the views which
I now entertain in regard to the claims of foreign
lands. To you, my beloved classmates, the book
is specially addressed; and if I use a frankness and
freedom, which might possibly be construed into presumption,
if I were addressing strangers and elder brethren,
I am sure that I shall fall under no such imputation
when communicating my thoughts to you. I wish
to express my thoughts familiarly, as we used to do
to each other, and at the same time with the earnestness
and solemnity which one ought always to feel when
pleading for the perishing heathen.
A free, full, and earnest discussion
of such sentiments as those contained in this book,
had no small influence, under God, in preparing the
way for that extensive work of grace at these islands,
which has been denominated the Great Revival.
At the General meetings of the mission in the month
of May of 1836 and 1837, the main doctrines of this
volume were thoroughly canvassed, and with deep effect
upon every member present. Our feelings were
enlisted, our hearts were warmed, and our thoughts
were absorbed by the great topic of the world’s
conversion. The theme, in all its amazing import
and solemn aspects, was allowed to take possession
of our souls. It gave importunity to prayer, earnestness
and unction to our conversation and sermons, and zeal,
energy, and perseverance to every department of our
work; and the result was soon apparent in the wide-spread
and glorious revival.
It can almost be said, therefore,
that the main sentiments of this volume have received
the impress of the Divine approbation.
In the fall of 1837, I was constrained
by family afflictions and the failure of my own health,
to embark for the United States. As I began to
breathe the bracing air of Cape Horn, my strength in
a measure revived, and having no other employment
on board ship, I sketched the outlines of most of
the chapters of this little volume. My heart was
full of the theme in the discussion of which I had
taken part before my embarkation, and I penned my
thoughts freely, amidst the tossings of the ship and
the care of two motherless children.
On my arrival in the United States,
I revised and filled up the outlines I had sketched,
and delivered them, in connection with various historical
lectures, at several places, as Providence gave me
opportunity. Now, having returned to these islands,
I have thought best to give the chapters a second
revision, to dedicate the whole to you, and with the
help of the press to send you each a copy, accompanying
it with my prayers and my most affectionate salutations.
And may I not expect, beloved classmates, that you
will read the book with candor, weigh well its arguments,
admit its entreaties to your hearts, as those of your
former associate, and act in accordance with the convictions
of duty?
Among the considerations that have
prompted me to the train of thought contained in this
book, as well as to the views interwoven in my history
of the Sandwich Islands, I may mention, as not the
least weighty and prominent, a dutiful respect and
filial obedience to the instructions delivered to
me, in connection with others, by the wise and devoted
Evarts, on the eve of our embarkation for the
foreign field. The delivery of those instructions
was his last effort of the kind, and they may therefore
be regarded as the parental accents of his departing
spirit. On that occasion of interest, to which
memory can never be treacherous, a part of the charge
to us was in the following words:
“From the very commencement
of your missionary life, cultivate a spirit of enterprise.
Without such a spirit, nothing great will be achieved
in any human pursuit; and this is an age of enterprise,
to a remarkable and unprecedented extent. In
manufactures, in the mechanic arts, in agriculture,
in education, in the science of government, men are
awake and active; their minds are all on the alert;
their ingenuity is tasked; and they are making improvements
with the greatest zeal. Shall not the same enterprise
be seen in moral and religious things? Shall not
missionaries, especially, aim at making discoveries
and improvements in the noblest of all practical sciences that
of applying the means which God has provided, for
the moral renovation of the world?
“There are many problems yet
to be solved before it can be said, that the best
mode of administering missionary concerns has been
discovered. What degree of expense shall be incurred
in the support of missionary families, so as to secure
the greatest possible efficiency with a given amount
of money; how to dispose of the children of missionaries,
in a manner most grateful to their parents, and most
creditable to the cause; in what proportion to spend
money and time upon the education of the heathen,
as a distinct thing from preaching the Gospel; how
far the press should be employed; by what means the
attention of the heathen can be best gained at the
beginning; how their wayward practices and habits
can be best restrained and corrected; how the intercourse
between missionaries and the Christian world can be
conducted in the best manner, so as to secure the
highest responsibility, and the most entire confidence;
and how the suitable proportion between ministers of
the Gospel retained at home, and missionaries sent
abroad, is to be fixed in practice, as well as in
principle: all these things present questions
yet to be solved. There is room for boundless
enterprise, therefore, in the great missionary field,
which is the world.”
I have not attempted to discuss all
the topics here named, but have endeavored to cultivate
in some degree, as enjoined in the paragraph, a spirit
of enterprising inquiry.
If this book shall impart any light
on the interesting topic of Christian duty to the
heathen, and be owned by the Saviour, in the great
day, as having contributed, though but in a small degree,
towards that glorious consummation of which the prophets
speak, and to which we all look forward, I shall be
richly rewarded.
Your affectionate classmate,
Sheldon Dibble.
Lahainaluna, Fe, 1844.