Pioneer Methodist missionary W. E. Horley, who faithfully and successfully served the
Difficulties missionaries face

‘LET us look at a few of the difficulties which surround the missionary …
First, difficulties because of the climate. Very few can stand the constant drain upon the reserve forces of their system owing to the persistent, continual, never-changing steaming heat of
A perennial summer isn’t a
Another great difficulty which faces us is the diversity of language. I should say that nowhere on the face of the globe is the diversity of languages so great as in
No sooner has a worker mastered one Chinese dialect than he finds that to be really efficient he needs to acquire two or three others. In one service that we know of, no less than three Chinese dialects are used. I have seen two Chinese meet together and as they couldn’t understand the other’s dialect, they spoke in Malay, the lingua franca of the
Another difficulty which presents itself is that of the shifting character of most of the population. They are here today and gone tomorrow. They come from
Another great difficulty is our lack of trained native evangelists. How can we expect men who have no training in speaking, conducting divine service, with little or no education, to make efficient evangelists? Not that I limit the Holy Spirit’s power and unction, but my contention is that the Holy Spirit can do more with a trained sanctified man than with an untrained though sanctified man … If the heathen are to be won for Christ it will have to be done mostly by native agencies.
Then we are sometimes hindered, though, thank God, but rarely, with “cranks” and their “crankiness”. The idea has been sometimes fostered at home that if a man is a failure as a minister, well, he will do for the foreign field. We need the best. The most learned, the most enthusiastic, the most practical, sanctified, common sense men for the foreign field. Men and women who are cranks, who have foibles and idiosyncrasies, who are not blessed with common sense, ought to stay at home.
The voyage out won’t change them and the climate and difficulties here won’t improve them. We have known of “cranks” who wouldn’t wear sun hats because it was the same sun which they had in
I have met with others who thought it a sin for a missionary to play golf, tennis or football, and who took exercise themselves in long-chairs, rather than mix with the world, afterwards wondering why they suffered so much from it. What crankiness to think that in neglecting one’s body we are practising holiness …
Then, perhaps the most important and greatest difficulty is that we become so engrossed in our service for the Master that we neglect communion and soul culture with Him. Our work must not crowd out our waiting upon God for the endowment of power, nor our times of silent meditation before the Lord.
The manna from God’s Word must be gathered daily or the spiritual life will suffer. The fire will soon go out from lack of fuel if we neglect the gathering of it. Christ must be conceived as not only for us, but in us …’ – MM, January 1902, pages 37, 44, edited.
Earnest Lau, the Associate Editor of Methodist Message, is also the Archivist of The
QUOTE:
WAITING UPON GOD
‘Perhaps the most important and greatest difficulty is that we become so engrossed in our service for the Master that we neglect communion and soul culture with Him. Our work must not crowd out our waiting upon God for the endowment of power, nor our times of silent meditation before the Lord.’
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