Page 212 - Neglected Arabia Vol 2
P. 212

The Cost of Evangelization Among Moslems

                                                        Rev. W. Idris Jones
                                    (Reprinted with permission of the editor from The Moslem World of July, 1929.
                                One of the younger missionaries of the Aden Mission of the United Free Church of
                                Scotland, the Rev. VV. Idris Jones, writes on the cost of evangelization and pays a
                                tribute, among others, to the memory of Henry Bilkert of Basrah.—Editor.;
                                 C    ON VERTS from Islam have ever been won through tears and
                                       blood and the stubborn road of progress is flanked by the graves
                                       of the pioneers. Raymond Lull, stoned to death by an angry mob
                                       outside the walls of Bugia; Henry Martyn dying in India, a young
                                man with the best of life still untried; Ian Keith Falconer in his lonely
                                grave among the barren fastnesses of Aden ; their blood calls aloud to us
                                —not for revenge but for lives of sacrificial service poured out like theirs
                                 in joyful abandon and utter selflessness. It is little more than a century
                                 rtiiiic the Uiriniiun Chui'di uwukr in the duty uf cvuiigdi/.nlinn tuiinug
                                 Moslem*; yel in llmt lime llierc have been hardly fewer niarlyr* fur their
                                 faith Ilian converts among (lie natives of the "home countries" of lalum
                                 where the religion uf Muhammad has lung held sway.
                                    As one views the present extent of Islam, spread like a huge fan across
                                 the breadth of Asia and Africa and embracing a score of nations, one
                                 feels appalled by its apparent strength and solidarity. Yet there is evi­
                                 dence that the old-time stability of Islam is breaking down; national and
                                 economic forces are at work, weakening and disintegrating the solid wall
                                 of custom and tradition; and there are signs that the near future will see
                                 many Moslem lands, hitherto closed to evangelization, at last unbarred
                                 to the entrance of Christian missionaries.
                                    What is the wedge that, driven into the fissures in this already crumb­
                                 ling wall, shall break up the hard crust of antagonism and lay the veiled
                                 cities of Islam open to the light of the Gospel? It is not Western civiliza­
                                 tion, although that has played its part; not education alone, however en­
                                 lightened ; not organization, however thorough and extensive. It is nothing
                                 else but lives laid down gladly and willingly for these sons of the desert
                                 and the mountains, who are of those “other sheep” over whom Christ
                                 yearned.
                                    To the writer’s mind there presents itself a vivid picture of three new
                                 graves in Moslem countries—the resting place of those who gave their all
                                 for the hope of the Gospel; who held death cheap if but one might be won
                                 from Islam to Christ.
                                    The first grave is that of William Temple Gairdner in the little English
                                 cemetery in Cairo. None of those who were present at the funeral service
                                 will ever forget its quietness and touching simplicity. There were no
                                 agonized ones, no noisy weeping, such as is the usual accompaniment of
                                 a Moslem funeral; all was )»cua\ ami the dominant note was one of
                                 triumph. Many leaders of Mohammedan thought were present and they
                                 must have been impressed by the beauty and hope of a Christian burial.
                                 Canon Gairdner has served Egypt nobly and devotedly for thirty years*
                                 but his greatest testimony to the living power of Christianity was in his
                                 own burial. As his body rests under the shade of branching palms in
                                 that beautiful garden of the dead, who dare say that his life has not reached


















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