THE MISSIONARY NEXT DOOR
Every year, quietly and unobtrusively, thousands of missionaries pass through the waiting lounges of airports all over the world. They board planes headed for various destinations around the globe to give tirelessly of themselves and their resources for the singular purpose of fulfilling their mission: to help spread the gospel to those who are so desperately in need of it. They are the unsung heroes on the front lines who sling their Bibles, laptops, teacher’s notes, stethoscopes or cameras over their shoulders and make their way through a sea of unfamiliar faces in unfamiliar places to do the work that most people wouldn’t want to do.
But they aren’t the first generation to take these bold steps. They are the latest generation in a long line of men and women who have gone before them, breaking new ground, razing insurmountable barriers and extending the hand of brotherly love to those who don’t look or speak like them. I think of some of the most revolutionary missionaries in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Hudson Taylor who boarded a ship to China with the singular purpose of bringing the Bible to the men, women, and children of that country. Lottie Moon and Gladys Aylward who brought the hope of the gospel to countless women and children in China. Abraham La Rue who had a burning desire in his soul to bring the Advent message to China and who did so in the face of meager resources. Their legacies live on today in the form of the countless millions of Chinese Christians. Amy Carmichael whose passion for the lost took her to India and led her to rescue babies from temple prostitution, thus literally raising an army of young women for Jesus. Anna Knight who took the Advent message to the women and children of India, working tirelessly to educate and save.