Livingstone
the Liberator (David Livingstone)
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David
Livingstone was one of the greatest missionary pioneer
pathfinders of the greatest century of missionary
advance. His primary goals were reached only after
his death: the cessation of the pervasive Islamic
slave trade and the opening up of Africa to Christianity
and lawful commerce.
He
had the grace to see that his mission was part of
a divine plan to set many souls free from slavery,
both physical and spiritual. Livingstones
great goal of bringing to the world's attention
the plight of the Islamic slave trade in Africa
was achieved largely through the work of his convert,
American journalist Henry Morton Stanley.
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David
Livingstone
by: Silvester C Horne
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Faithful
and Diligent
David was brought up in a pious, but poverty stricken,
home in Scotland. He was an avid reader and borrowed extensively
from the local library. By age 9 he had already committed
to memory Psalm 119 and won a copy of the New Testament
as a reward. By age 10 David was employed 14 hours a day,
6 days a week at the local cotton spinning factory. With
his first week's wages he purchased a copy of Rudiments
of Latin! David managed to read in the factory
by placing his book on a portion of the spinning jenny
so that he could catch sentence after sentence as he passed
at his work. He maintained fairly constant study, undisturbed
by the roar of the machinery. His conversion to Christ
at age 12 inspired him to resolve to devote his life to
the alleviation of human misery.
Three
themes dominated his life: evangelisation, exploration
and emancipation. He wrote at the time: That
the salvation of men ought to be the chief desire and
aim of every Christian. He therefore made a
resolution: he would give to the cause of missions all
that he might earn beyond what was required for his subsistence.
After
10 years of daily drudgery at the cotton mill, David had
saved enough money to be able to set out to study theology
and medicine. Medical science in the 1830s was,
by today's standards, primitive. Surgical operations were
performed at hazardous speed because of the lack of anaesthetics.
Chloroform and ether were not introduced until several
years later and the discovery of antiseptics lay 25 years
ahead. The study of chemistry was growing, but physics
had hardly started, and biochemistry and bacteriology
were unknown. Nothing at all was known about the tropical
diseases he was to encounter such as malaria and blackwater
fever.
It
was not in Livingstones character to relax. He took
his task and calling most seriously and whatever he did
he performed thoroughly. He was uncompromising, diligent
and inflexible in his adherence to his word.
Friends
described him as: a man of resolute courage;
fire, water, stonewall would not stop Livingstone
in the fulfillment of any recognised duty.
It
took him 3 months by sailing ship to reach Cape Town and
another 4 months by ox cart before he even reached Robert
Moffats mission station at Kuruman where he would
begin his work for the Lord in Africa. When he landed
in South Africa, on 17 March 1841, David Livingstone arrived
in a continent that was plagued with problems. Africa
was still a place of mystery to the Europeans. The Arabs,
south of the Sahara never ventured inland far from the
coast. The rivers were riddled with rapids and sand bars.
The deadly malaria disease was widespread and inhibited
travel. Entire expeditions of 300 to 400 men had been
decimated by malaria. The African terrain was difficult
to negotiate. Floods, tropical forests and swamps thwarted
wheeled transport.
Fearless
and Fervent
Livingstone soon acquired a reputation for fearless faith
particularly when he walked to the Barka tribe
infamous for the murder of 4 White traders whom
they had mercilessly poisoned and strangled. As the first
messenger of mercy in many regions, Livingstone soon received
further challenge. Chief Sechele pointed to the great
Kalahari desert: you never can cross that country
to the tribes beyond; it is utterly impossible even for
us Black men. The challenge of crossing this
obstacle began to fascinate Livingstone who was convinced
that I can do all things through Christ who strengthens
me Philippians 4:13.Livingstone wrote: I
shall try to hold myself in readiness to go anywhere,
provided it be forward.
He
is reported to have had a steadfast manner and folk knew
where they stood with him. Livingstones plans to
establish a Bible college for Africans was frustrated.
However, the Sovereignty of God was seen in this. Had
Livingstones wishes been carried out, he might have
spent his life's work training in a Bible college rather
than traversing Africa and dealing a death blow to the
slave trade.
His
three great daily challenges he described as: heat, harsh
conditions and hardness of hearts.
I
hope to be permitted to work as long as I live beyond
other men's line of things and plant the seed of the
Gospel where others have not planted. But every excursion
for that purpose will involve separation from my family
for periods of 4 or 5 months.
I am a missionary, heart and soul. God had an
only Son, and He was a missionary and physician. A poor,
poor imitation of Him I am, or wish to be. In His service
I hope to live, in it I wish to die.
During
his first missionary journey with his wife and children,
their 4th child, Elizabeth, was born. Within a few weeks
she had died and the rest of the family were sick. He
received much criticism for the irresponsibility
of taking a wife and 4 children on a missionary journey
in the wilderness. Later he was criticised for sending
his family back to Britain while he pioneered the hinterland
of Africa. When his wife rejoined him for his second great
missionary expedition in the Zambezi valley she died of
malaria.
I
shall open up a path in to the interior or perish.
He declared. May He bless us and make us blessings
even unto death. Shame upon us missionaries
if we are to be outdone by slave traders! If
Christian missionaries and Christian merchants could remain
throughout the year in the interior of the continent,
in 10 years, slave dealers will be driven out of the market.
A
Vision of Victory
David Livingstone was inspired by an optimistic eschatology.
Like most of the missionaries of the 19th Century, Livingstone
was a post-millenialist who held to the eschatology of
victory:
Discoveries
and inventions are culminative . . . filling the earth
with the glory of the Lord, all nations will sing His
glory and bow before Him . . . our work and its fruit
are culminative. We work towards a new state of things.
Future missionaries will be rewarded by conversions
for every sermon. We are their pioneers and helpers..
Let them not forget the watchmen of the night,
who worked when all was gloom and no evidence of success
in the way of conversions cheers our path. They will
doubtless have more light than we, but we serve our
Master earnestly and proclaim the same Gospel as they
will do.(see Zephaniah 2:11 and Zechariah
14:9)
A quiet audience today. The seed is being sown,
the least of all seeds now, but it will grow into a
mighty tree. It is as if it were a small stone cut
out of a mountain, but it will fill the whole earth!
(Daniel 2:34-35, 44), Matthew 13:31-32)
We
work for a glorious future which we are not destined
to see, the golden age which has not yet been but will
yet be. We are only morning stars shining in
the dark, but the glorious morn will break the
good time coming yet. (Revelation 2:26-28).
The
dominion has been given by the power of commerce and
population unto the people of the saints of the Most
High. This is an everlasting Kingdom, a little
stone cut out of the mountain without hands which will
cover the whole earth, for this time we work.
(Daniel 7:27 and Habakkuk 2:14)
Against
All Odds
Battling rains, chronic discomfort, rust, mildew and rot,
totally drenched and fatigued, laid low by fever, (he
suffered from Malaria alone 27 times!) Livingstone continued
to persevere across the continent. Hostile tribes demanded
exorbitant payment for crossing their territory. Some
tense moments were stared down by Livingstone, gun in
hand. Trials tested the tenacity of the travel wearied
team. As he wrote: Can the love of Christ not
carry the missionary where the slave trade carries the
trader?
After
2 years pioneering across the hinterland of Africa, Livingstone
reached Luanda. The Forerunner ship
was ready to take him to England. However, Livingstone
chose to return overland to bring his guides and porters
back to their village. Rather than risk their being sold
unto slavery in Portuguese West Africa, he preferred to
take another 2 years crossing the continent that had almost
killed him, on his first journey! However, had Livingstone
chosen to return he might well have ended his ministry.
The ship sank with all hands lost (and with his journals)!
These
privations, I beg you to observe, are not sacrifices.
I think that word ought never to be mentioned in reference
to anything we can do for Him who though He was rich,
yet for our sakes became poor.
Often
Livingstone endured excessive and unnecessary suffering
and deprivation hacking through dense jungle on foot because
lack of funds prevented him from affording the luxury
of a canoe!
Livingstone
often saw the sickening sight of the Islamic slave trade:
burned out villages, corpses floating down rivers and
long lines of shackled slaves being herded through the
bush. Livingstones mere presence often sent the
Yao slave raiders scurrying into the bushes. Many hundreds
of slaves were set free by Livingstone and his co-workers.
On one occasion a war party of Yao warriors attacked the
missionary party. While attempting to avoid confrontation,
the team found themselves cut off and surrounded by the
aggressive and blood thirsty mob. Finally, Livingstone
was forced to give the command to return fire. The slave
traders fled. This incident led to much criticism in England.
Charles Livingstone, his brother, on hearing one outburst
from Britain replied: if you were in Africa and
saw a host of murderous savages aiming their heavily laden
muskets and poisoned arrows at you, more light might enter
your mind . . . and if it didn't, great daylight would
enter your body through arrow and bullet holes!
It
was Livingstones great desire to see the slave trade
cease. Firstly, there was the internal slave trade between
hostile tribes. Secondly, there were slave traders from
the coast, Arabs or Portuguese, for whom local tribes
were encouraged to collect slaves by marauding and murder.
Thirdly, there were the parties sent out from Portuguese
and Arab coastal towns with cloths, beads, muskets and
ammunition to exchange for slaves.
Incidentally,
Livingstone inspired the shortest war in history
in 1872 when the British Navy presented an ultimatum
to the Sultan of Zanzibar to close their flourishing slave
market. When the Sultan refused, his palace was shelled
resulting in a record breaking surrender within
the hour!
In
his writings and public speaking engagements, Livingstone
regularly spoke on his twin concerns to enlighten
people on the evils of the slave trade, and to spread
the Christian Gospel amongst the heathen. Although he
was renowned for his exploration, in his mind it was primarily
a means to evangelism and to disciple the nations.
Livingstone
the Scientist
Dr. Livingstone believed in comprehensively fulfilling
the Great Commission ministering to body, mind
and spirit. Along with his Bible, surgical kit and medicine
chest, Livingstone always carried a microscope and sextant
with which he observed God's spectacularly diverse
creation with awe and wonder. His books are filled with
fascinating scientific, medical, botanical, anthropological
and geographic observations and details. Livingstone was
the first to map the great Zambezi river and many other
parts of the vast hinterland of Africa. He was one of
the first scientists to make the connection between mosquitos
and malaria, and he pioneered the use of quinine as a
treatment often experimenting on himself!
The
challenge of Livingstone rings out to us today: Can
that be called a sacrifice which is simply paid back as
a small part of a great debt owing to our God, which we
can never repay . . . it is emphatically no sacrifice.
Say rather, it is a privilege!
The
optimistic eschatology of Livingstone the Liberator, comes
as a stern rebuke to the prevailing escapist eschatology
of defeat and retreat.
His
steadfast example has been used by the Lord to inspire
hundreds of men and women to devote their lives to African
missions. Mary Slessor, for example, went to Calabar (present
day Nigeria) and ended the practice of murdering twins
(believed by animists to be bewitched.) Peter Cameron
was inspired to return to Africa after his first mission
failed, when he read the inscription on Livingstones
tomb in Westminster Abbey: Other sheep I have
which are not of this fold; them also I must bring.
I
beg to direct your attention to Africa: I know that in
a few years I shall be cut off from that country, which
is now open; do not let it be shut again! I go back to
Africa to try to make an open path for commerce and Christianity:
will you carry out the work which I have begun? I leave
it with you!
Dr.
Peter Hammond
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This article is the third of an eight part series on the
19th Century Missionary Movement, what inspired it, the
people who transformed nations and their legacy.
For
those who would like to learn more of David Livingtone,
Christians Liberty Press has recently published "David
Livingstone: Man of prayer and Action."