The Book of Missionary Heroes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about The Book of Missionary Heroes.

The Book of Missionary Heroes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about The Book of Missionary Heroes.

“Let the torch-bearers hand on the flame to the others” or “Let those who have the light pass it on.”

* * * * *

That relay-race of torch-bearers is a living picture of the wonderful relay-race of heroes who, right through the centuries, have, with dauntless courage and a scorn of danger and difficulty, passed through thrilling adventures in order to carry the Light across the continents and oceans of the world.

The torch-bearers!  The long race of those who have borne, and still carry the torches, passing them on from hand to hand, runs before us.  A little ship puts out from Seleucia, bearing a man who had caught the fire in a blinding blaze of light on the road to Damascus.  Paul crosses the sea and then threads his way through the cities of Cyprus and Asia Minor, passes over the blue AEgean to answer the call from Macedonia.  We see the light quicken, flicker and glow to a steady blaze in centre after centre of life, till at last the torch-bearer reaches his goal in Rome.

  “Yes, without cheer of sister or of daughter,
  Yes, without stay of father or of son,
  Lone on the land and homeless on the water
  Pass I in patience till the work be done.”

Centuries pass and men of another age, taking the light that Paul had brought, carry the torch over Apennine and Alp, through dense forests where wild beasts and wilder savages roam, till they cross the North Sea and the light reaches the fair-haired Angles of Britain, on whose name Augustine had exercised his punning humour, when he said, “Not Angles, but Angels.”  From North and South, through Columba and Aidan, Wilfred of Sussex and Bertha of Kent, the light came to Britain.

“Is not our life,” said the aged seer to the Mercian heathen king as the Missionary waited for permission to lead them to Christ, “like a sparrow that flies from the darkness through the open window into this hall and flutters about in the torchlight for a few moments to fly out again into the darkness of the night.  Even so we know not whence our life comes nor whither it goes.  This man can tell us.  Shall we not receive his teaching?” So the English, through these torch-bearers, come into the light.

The centuries pass by and in 1620 the little Mayflower, bearing Christian descendants of those heathen Angles—­new torch-bearers, struggles through frightful tempests to plant on the American Continent the New England that was indeed to become the forerunner of a New World.[1]

A century and a half passes and down the estuary of the Thames creeps another sailing ship.

The Government officer shouts his challenge: 

“What ship is that and what is her cargo?”

“The Duff,” rings back the answer, “under Captain Wilson, bearing Missionaries to the South Sea.”

The puzzled official has never heard of such beings!  But the little ship passes on and after adventures and tempests in many seas at last reaches the far Pacific.  There the torch-bearers pass from island to island and the light flames like a beacon fire across many a blue lagoon and coral reef.

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Project Gutenberg
The Book of Missionary Heroes from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.