Inspire

MISSIONARY

Ann and Andoniram Judson were among the first missionaries from the USA. They were young when they left for India and eventually God led them to Burma. The country was to change forever. Although Felix Carey (son of William Carey) was already in Burma, the Judsons pioneered the work there after he left. When they began their mission in Burma in 1813, they set a goal of translating the Bible and founding a church of 100 members before their death. By 1850, they left the bible, 100 churches, and over 8,000 believers.

Many of her friends and neighbours thought Ann was wild and romantic when she went off to India in 1812. It was unthinkable then that a young woman would travel to some little known spot on the globe to work among the unsaved in primitive surroundings. It meant leaving behind her family with little hope of seeing them again in this world. But Ann Hasseltine Judson insisted on going; she knew this was the work God had called her to do.

She was born in Bradford, Massachusetts, USA. When she was a teenager Ann accepted Christ as her Saviour and began to spend time in Bible study and prayer. She wanted to be used by God and prayed, 'Direct me in Thy service, and I ask no more. I would not choose my position of work, or place of labour. Only let me know Thy will, and I will readily comply'.

By 1810, when she was 21, Ann wanted to become a missionary to foreign lands. So did the Congregational minister named Adoniram Judson that she married on February 5, 1812; the next day, the newlyweds sailed from Salem, Massachusetts for Calcutta, India! Six other missionaries were also sent to Calcutta. At that time the government in India and the East India Company were opposed to missions and they were soon ordered to leave the country.

The Judsons therefore began their missionary work in Burma, located between India and China. The gospel had never reached that land of over 15 million people, and Ann prayed, “O thou Light of the world, dissipate the thick darkness which covers Burma, and let thy light arise and shine. O display thy grace and power among the Burmese. Subdue them to thyself, and make them thy chosen people”

The Judsons settled in Rangoon, the principle seaport of Burma and began learning the language. There were no rapid conversions but Ann and Adoniram were "sensible that the hearts of the heathen, as well as those of Christians, are in the hands of God, and in his own time he will turn them unto him." The Burmese frequently told the Judsons, "Your religion is good for you, ours for us." The missionaries hoped the lives they lived would convince the Burmese people that Christianity was good for them as well. Even so, there were only eighteen converts after nine years in Rangoon.

Ann and Adoniram learned the Burmese language and translated the Scriptures. The Burmese had no idea of a God who was eternal, without beginning or end, and it was difficult to find words to accurately describe the Christian truths. Nevertheless, within three years the Judsons had prepared a Burmese grammar, printed two tracts, and translated the gospel of Matthew. Ann had formed a society of indigenous women who met together on Sundays to pray and read the Scriptures.

In spite of difficult living conditions, Ann came to love Burma as a place where she had learned much of the Lord' s mercy and grace. It was difficult for her to leave her adopted land in 1822, when a severe liver problem forced her to return to America. While in America, Ann wrote a history of the Burmese mission that was widely read in America and encouraged many to become missionaries. Ann awakened many to the conditions of the Burmese women and the importance of female missionaries working among them.

When she returned to her home in Rangoon in 1823, war between Britain and Burma was threatening. When war did break out, the Burmese thought the Americans to be associates of the British and Adoniram was thrown into death prison. Ann, then two months pregnant, became a prisoner in the inner room of her own house. She valiantly pleaded with government officials for her husband' s life and was secretly able to bring supplies and food to Adoniram and his fellow prisoners.

Shortly after their daughter was born, Adoniram caught a tropical fever. Ann devotedly cared for him from a small hut near the prison gate. One night, however, Adoniram was moved secretly to another prison. He was forced to walk barefoot eight miles over sand and gravel. The soles of his feet were raw flesh, and he was near death when he finally arrived at Oung-pen-le. Ann took her three-month-old daughter and followed after her husband. She was able to share a room with the jailer and his family, but became seriously ill herself from both smallpox and spotted fever. Ann later wrote to her brother: "The acme of my distress, consisted in the awful uncertainty of our final fate. My prevailing opinion was, that my husband would suffer violent death; and that I should, of course, become a slave,...But the consolation of religion, in these trying circumstances, were neither ' few nor small!' It taught me to look beyond this world, to that rest…where Jesus reigns and oppression never enters".

When Burma and the British made peace, Adoniram was released and united with his wife and infant daughter. Ann, however, was still weak. She died of a fever on October 24, 1826. Her daughter died within six months. Ann Hasseltine Judson was the first woman missionary to leave America; her story of constant love for Christ encouraged many other women to serve Christ on the mission field. Adoniram suffered with depression following the death of his wife but continued the missionary work in Burma and finished the translation of the bible.

For more information on Burma (now called Myanmar), the persecution and the work there, go to the link below. AsiaLink workers were recently in Burma and you can read what happened on that trip. http://www.asialink.org.uk/burma.html