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Silhouette:
Amy Carmichael was
born on December 16, 1867 in northern Ireland. She was the oldest of seven
children born to a mill owner and was raised in a devout Presbyterian family.
She received Christ as her Savior at the age of 15 while attending boarding
school, and the following year her father moved her family to Belfast. One day
at the age of 17 when Amy was walking home from church, she saw an old “shawlie”
– lower class mill ladies who wore shawls on their heads much to the disdain of
more “respectable” people who wore hats. The woman was struggling under a
burden she was trying to carry, and although Amy felt compelled to help, she
was embarrassed to be seen helping the old lady in view of others who were also
walking home from church. That afternoon she felt the Lord speak to her
directly, and she decided from that day forward she would rather be dead to the
customs and fashions of this world than ever pass up an opportunity to show His
love to others,
When Amy was 18
years old, her father passed away. In September of that same year, she attended
a preaching conference in Keswick, England that was focused on “higher
Christian life.” During the final prayer, Amy felt the Lord asking her if she
could do the same as Jesus Christ had done for her and give all of herself to
Him. In that moment, she surrendered her life to the Lord for Him to use her in
whatever way He could. When Amy returned home, she started a class for the
street kids in Belfast and showered her love on them. She also began a Sunday
school class for the “shawlies.” Within just a couple of years this class had
grown to the point that they needed a place that would seat 500. Through an
advertisement in a Christian publication, Amy secured a monetary donation to
build the building, and a mill owner donated a plot of land to put it on. She
built the “Welcome Hall” where everyone was welcome no matter what their
station. That same year she heard Hudson Taylor preach about the desperate need
for missionaries in China, and she was convinced that the Lord was calling her
into mission work. Amy was a constant witness wherever she went, and she continued
working at the Welcome Hall until 1889 when she moved to Manchester where she
immediately started ministering to the mill girls there.
On January 13,
1892 at the age of 24, Amy felt the Lord telling her it was “time to go.” She
was sad to leave her family and her ministries but excited about serving the
Lord on the mission field. Amy suffered from neuralgia which affected her
nerves and made her whole body weak and achy and often sent her to bed for long
periods of time. Because of this, she struggled to find a mission board that
would accept her. She had trained with the China Inland Mission, but just
before she was to set sail for China, they told her that her health made her an
unlikely candidate for field service. She did not let these rejections deter
her from what she knew the Lord had called her to do. She might have been frail
in health, but she was strong in heart.
By March of 1893
she was serving in Japan as the first missionary sent out by the Keswick Convention.
During her short 15-month stay in Japan she saw more converts than many
missionaries saw in their entire ministry. She was disappointed when she had to
make the decision to leave due to her poor health, but after a short stay in
Ceylon for respite, she was commissioned by the Church of England Zenana
Missionary Society to go to India.
Amy began her work by going from village to village
witnessing, teaching, and training women. In 1897 she formed a group called “The
Starry Cluster” that consisted of Christian ladies who went with her from
village to village giving the Gospel, sharing how Jesus had changed their
lives, and teaching the Bible. In 1900 Amy’s work took her to the town of Dohnavur
near the southern tip of India. It was here she first became involved with rescuing
children. On March 6, 1901 she met Preena, a 7-year old girl who had run away
from the local Hindu temple and had come to Amy seeking shelter and protection.
Preena had fallen prey to the situation many young Indian girls found
themselves in when they were unwanted by their families. These girls were “dedicated”
to the gods at the Hindu temples and then forced into prostitution to make
money for the priests. The notion was revolting to Amy, and with her agreement
to shelter Preena, she began her rescue work.
Amy started the
Dohnavur Fellowship which quickly turned into a sanctuary for young girls. She
wore traditional Indian clothing and often dyed her skin with coffee so as to
be able to go undetected when she was doing her rescue work. So great was her
love for every child that she would endure the pain of travelling long
distances just to save one child from suffering. Since the value of a
girl-child was very little, families soon began to give Amy their unwanted
newborn girls. Amy’s Fellowship, or her “family” as she preferred to call it,
continued to grow and grow. She fought hard against the Indian caste system
which caused a mother to allow her child to die rather than be seen by a
physician in a lower caste, and she had to withstand the disapproval and
condemnation of fellow missionaries who thought she shouldn’t get so involved.
Amy took on the role of mother to the hundreds of girls she looked after, and for
the next 10 years her brave heart withstood extreme exhaustion, personal
danger, and numerous threats of imprisonment from those who accused her of the
crime of kidnapping.
Eventually Amy was
able to buy some property and build a small village where she, her daughters,
and her band of Christian woman were able to live. In 1918 Amy took in her
first baby boy and started a village for them next to the girls’. During her
decades of ministry, she rescued hundreds of boys and over a thousand girls. What
started off as a home for unwanted baby girls grew to include a property of 400
acres that included homes for boys and girls of all ages, nurseries, schools, a
working dairy farm, fruit and vegetable farms, and rice lands, There were
kitchens, laundries, workshops, office buildings, and eventually a hospital funded
by Queen Mary was added. Amy loved all her “children” and called them her
precious Gems. They loved her and called her “Amma” – “mother” in Tamil.
In 1931 at the age
of 63 Amy suffered a fall which left her quite crippled. By 1935 her health had
worsened, and she became bedridden. She didn’t let this stop her though, and she
spent her time daily in prayer, teaching, visiting with the children, and showering
her love on them. All through the years, Amy continued to fight against temple
prostitution, and finally in 1948 just a couple years before her death, she was
able to see it outlawed.
Her Story/My Story:
Amy’s life’s goal
was to make God’s love known to those around her. She often taught her children
in word and in deed about the great love that God had for them even though
their family and society had abandoned them. One of the 35 or more books Amy
authored is called “If” and is about knowing the true love of Calvary. Here are
some of Amy’s thoughts on the matter:
·
“If souls can
suffer alongside, and I hardly know it, because the spirit of discernment is
not in me, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If I slip into
the place that can be filled by Christ alone, making myself the first necessity
to a soul instead of leading it to fasten upon Him, then I know nothing of Calvary
love.”
· “If I belittle
those whom I am called to serve, talk of their weak points in contrast perhaps
with what I think of as my strong points; if I adopt a superior attitude,
forgetting “who made thee to differ? and what hast thou that thou hast not
received?” then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If I take offence
easily; if I am content to continue in cold unfriendliness, though friendship
be possible, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If my attitude be
one of fear, not faith, about the one who has disappointed me; if I say “Just
what I expected,” if a fall occurs, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
·
“If I do not give
a friend “The benefit of the doubt,” but put the worst construction instead of
the best on what is said or done, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “. . . if I put my own good name before the
other's highest good, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If I can write an
unkind letter, speak an unkind work, think an unkind thought without grief and
shame, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If I do not feel
far more for the grieved Saviour than for my worried self when troublesome
things occur, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If I make much of
anything appointed, magnify it secretly to myself or insidiously to others; if
I let them think it “hard,” if I look back longingly upon what used to be, and
linger among the byways of memory, so that my power to help is weakened, then I
know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If I hold on to
choices of any kind, just because they are my choice; if I give any room to my
private likes and dislikes, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
· “If the ultimate,
the hardest, cannot be asked of me; if my fellows hesitate to ask it and turn
to someone else, then I know nothing of Calvary love.”
I remember when I
first went to Nigeria the reaction I got each time I would go into a village to
witness and invite them to church. Many of the Nigerian kids had never seen a
white lady before, and I was very strange to them. One day I visited a village
called Ekolaba. As I entered the village the kids that were playing outside started
gathering around me and staring. They followed me from house to house, and each
house we went to seemed to produce three more children for our caravan. By the
time I got to the center of the village there must have been 20-30 kids
standing about 5 feet from me giggling. If I looked in their direction at all,
they would run and scream with laughter. None of the kids spoke English, so
when I came to a house with a Yoruba lady on the porch, I said, “They don’t
like my white face.” She replied, “Oh,
they like it and your long hair.” I had
worn it down that day, and so it was long and very light compared to theirs.
One girl came very close and touched me. This seemed to be the go ahead sign
for the other kids because pretty soon they were all swarming around me.
In situations like
this, the kids would often pull at the skin on my arms, rub my face, and stroked
my hair trying to figure out what kind of breed of “animal” I was. These
children . . . scruffy, dirty faced, half-clothed . . . had my attention, and
since I could not speak their language and they could not speak mine, I would just
hold them in my arms, smile at them, and love on them the best I could.
Bible Study: A Love Like Calvary
Long before Elizabeth Barrett
Browning wrote the now commonly used phrase, “How do I love thee? Let me count
the ways,” God spoke these words in Jeremiah 31:3b
“. . . Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with
lovingkindness have I drawn thee.” The Bible is full of some of the most
amazing stories of love like that of Solomon and the Shunamite woman or Hosea’s
love for his unfaithful wife. We can see the great love between a parent and a
child in the stories of Abraham and Isaac, Eunice and Timothy, and Joseph who
loved Jesus as his own. One of my favorite stories in the Bible is that of the
love shared between David and Jonathan, a friendship whose love surpassed that
of a spouse, but no greater love story has there ever been or will there ever
be than the love story of Calvary. So many adjectives come to mind when I think
of the kind of love that Jesus had for me on Calvary, but here are few:
1. Calvary love is a
Forgiving love.
Romans 5:8 “But God commendeth his love
toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.”
2. Calvary love is a Forbearing love.
2 Peter 3:9 “The Lord is not slack
concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to
us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to
repentance.”
3. Calvary love is a Forever love. Lamentations 3:22 “"It is of the LORD'S mercies that
we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not.”
4. Calvary love is a Formidable love. Romans 8:38-39 “For I am persuaded, that neither death,
nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor
things to come, Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to
separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
5. Calvary love is a Forthright love. I John 4:10 “Herein is love, not that we loved God, but
that he loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.”
6. Calvary love is a Forgetful love. Hebrews 10:17 “And their sins and iniquities will I
remember no more.”
7. Calvary love is a Forward love. Jeremiah
29:11 “For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the LORD,
thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.”
8. Calvary love is a For everyone love.
John 3:16 “For God so loved the world, that
he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not
perish, but have everlasting life.
Copyright 2019 www.sharihouse.com
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*Disclaimer:
*Disclaimer:
I have chosen to highlight the life of these ladies because of what they have accomplished for the Lord not because I agree with their doctrinal beliefs. As with all study of man, our focus should be on the character traits they bestowed in their lives that allowed the Lord to use them, how the Lord used them, the methods of ministry they incorporated that allowed them to be effective, etc. We do not study man to get our doctrine. Our doctrinal beliefs should only come from the Bible. To that end you may find you don’t agree with the doctrine of a particular person that I write about, but I believe there is still much wisdom we can gain from studying their lives.
1 comment:
What a wonderful story of Amy Carmichael's life and the lessons for your own mission in Nigeria. I am constantly challenged to have an unconditional love for others. I often succeed but I also fail and today's story renews my desire to succeed more often. Amy Carmichael's life is a true inspiration.
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