Page 111 - History of Christianity - Student Textbook
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Study Section 21:  The Gospel goes to Africa





             21.1 Connect

                       So far, a lot of church history has taken place in Northern Africa, the European continent, and in
                       North America.  That’s because of missionary efforts to spread the Gospel to those people first.
                       FINALLY, God laid on the hearts of these believers to travel to Africa as missionaries and share the
                       Gospel with the millions of people who were lost there.  One of the greatest missionaries of all time
                       was David Livingston.  If you go to Livingston in the south of Zambia, you can see a bronze sculpture
                       of him next to Victoria Falls, the falls he discovered as he traveled north from S. Africa to share the
             Gospel northward.  He was an amazing man of faith as well as an explorer.  He sought to abolish the slave trade,
             but his primary goal was to share Christ with the people of Africa.  Let’s learn about this great man…..


             21.2 Objectives

                      1.  The student should be able to give a biographical sketch of the life of David Livingston and share
                      how his life played a significant role in bringing the Gospel to Africa.

                      2. In contrast to David Livingston, the student should also be able to biographically explain the life of
             Karl Marx and the results of his errant teachings that have impacted millions of lives, even to this day.


             21.3 David Livingston, 1813-73 ––

                       https://www.christianitytoday.com/history/people/missionaries/david-
                      livingstone.html

                      "[I am] serving Christ when shooting a buffalo for my men or
                      taking an observation, [even if some] will consider it not
                      sufficiently or even at all missionary."

             With four theatrical words, "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?"—words journalist
             Henry Morton Stanley rehearsed in advance—David Livingstone became
             immortal.  Stanley stayed with Livingstone for five months and then went off to
             England to write his bestseller, How I Found Livingstone. Livingstone, in the meantime, got lost again—in a
             swamp literally up to his neck.  Within a year and a half, he died in a mud hut, kneeling beside his cot in prayer.

             The whole civilized world wept. They gave him a 21-gun salute and a hero's funeral among the saints in
             Westminster Abbey. "Brought by faithful hands over land and sea," his tombstone reads, "David Livingstone:
             missionary, traveler, philanthropist.  For 30 years his life was spent in an unwearied effort to evangelize the
             native races, to explore the undiscovered secrets, and to abolish the slave trade."

             Highway man
             At age 25, after a childhood spent working 14 hours a day in a cotton mill, followed by learning in class and on
             his own, Livingstone was captivated by an appeal for medical missionaries to China. As he trained, however, the
             door to China was slammed shut by the Opium War. Within six months, he met Robert Moffat, a veteran
             missionary of southern Africa, who enchanted him with tales of his remote station, glowing in the morning sun
             with "the smoke of a thousand villages where no missionary had been before."

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