STORY BY EARNEST LAU
PHOTOS FROM
THE METHODIST CHURCH ARCHIVES
Isabella accepted
James' call to
teach in India
IMAGINE being sent off
by your mother to college at the age of 15 with $162.50, her blessing
and the advice to "spend this carefully".
This is the moving beginning of a story of a poor but bright young
lad who was later to become a dynamic Methodist missionary and
bishop, James Mills Thoburn, who led the team which opened Methodist
work in Singapore, and provided episcopal supervision after 1888.
Born on March 7, 1836 in St Clairsville, Ohio, James was the son
of Irish immigrants, the eldest of nine children. In 1850, a year
after the death of his father, James enrolled in Allegheny College
and graduated in 1857, after having to seek temporary employment
as a teacher for a few years because he was short of funds.
He was converted at a church meeting, and although he continued
in a "twilight of the soul", his potential was noticed
by his pastor who appointed him as a leader of their obligatory
class meetings. Forcing himself to lead and pray publicly, his
efforts were apparently effective, and resulted in the doubling
of the class enrolment - leading to his being encouraged to enter
the Christian ministry, even though he was only 19 at the time.
He resolved, however, to complete his college education, joined
the Pittsburgh Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church and
was ordained in 1858.
On Jan 1, 1859, James answered the call to be a missionary to
India and sailed in July. Coming close to the beginnings of the
Methodist Mission in India, set up by William Butler in 1857,
James' career paralleled the remarkable growth of the work in
India in the second half of the 19th century.
Two almost revolutionary developments were the direct result of
his leadership. He was one of the first to start work among India's
women and work among the low-caste and untouchables.
It was he who first opened the possibility of his sister, Isabella,
taking part in a promising future for India which included educating
women and girls, but finances did not exist for a school in every
village where there were Christians.
Without much thought, he penned a letter to Isabella, asking if
she would like to teach in India. Drawn by the "law of service"
which her mother inculcated in her from young, Isabella accepted
without hesitation and when the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society
(WFMS) was formed in 1869, together with Dr Clara Swain, they
became the first two Methodist women missionaries to be sponsored
by the WFMS. Both were the forerunners of a small army of workers
who served in India.
While Dr Swain pioneered medical work among women, Isabella was
to provide an education for the women who were confined to the
zenanas, starting in a one-room schoolhouse in 1870, and expanding
to the stately and respected Isabella Thoburn College for Women
in Lucknow in 1890 that carries on her work to this day.
One beneficiary was our Mrs Ellice Handy (née
Zuberbuhler) who attended the college in 1917 after completing
her Senior Cambridge at Methodist Girls' School (MGS) at the tender
age of 14. But she had to spend one year studying Latin before
being allowed to start on her BA programme. She returned to Singapore
to teach at MGS for the next 25 years, and became the first Asian
Principal of the school.
Meanwhile, Isabella's brother, the Rev James Thoburn's remarkable
missionary career in India, which started with preaching to both
British soldiers and low-caste folk, included establishing the
"Centennial School" in Lucknow, the Lucknow Christian
College, Sunday Schools which grew strongly from 34 in 1870 (with
116 students) to 344 in 1881 (with 15,397 students) and editing
the Lucknow Witness, a weekly Christian paper. In addition, he
was involved in numerous building projects - church sanctuaries,
college and school buildings.
As a dynamic speaker and a staunch believer in evangelistic work,
he invited the American evangelist William Taylor, widely known
as "California Taylor", from his courageous and successful
work among the saloons and gambling dens of San Francisco, to
preach in India - one result being the conversion of a young man,
William F. Oldham, who was to be a key player when the Singapore
Mission was started in 1885.
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James Thoburn brought Methodism to South-east Asia |
Isabella Thoburn College for Women in Lucknow, India. |
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James: A poor, bright young lad who became a dynamic Methodist missionary. |
Isabella: Provided education for women. |