| JAMES
HUDSON TAYLOR (1832 - 1905)
| Small
and weak? | | On
3 June 1905 OMFs founder James Hudson Taylor breathed his last. Although
the mission he founded eventually had to leave China, his work and legacy live
on. | The
Boxer Uprising As darkness came on, the most awful cries were heard
in the city, most demonical and unforgettable, the cries of the Boxers
Sha kuei-tzu (kill the devils) mingled with the
shrieks of the victims and the groans of the dying. Hudson
Taylor, increasingly frail and worn out through frequent travel, had broken down
during an evangelistic meeting in Boston, America. He was convalescing in Davos,
Switzerland as telegram after telegram came through, telling of riots, massacres
and the murder of missionaries. As
the slaughter of Christians continued by imperial decree (in June 1900 the Empress
Dowager ordered the destruction of all foreign devils), an exhausted
Taylor reeled at the news of Christians being tortured, shot, beaten, hacked to
pieces, burned, strangled, beheaded, stabbed or speared to death. Weakened
by the terrific strain caused by the Boxer Uprising the exhausted 68-year-old
found himself unable to read, think or even pray. But I can trust,
said Taylor. Eventually an 18,000-strong international army fought its way from
Tientsin to Beijing, restoring order and suppressing the uprising. Though
Taylors CIM suffered more than any other mission in China (it lost 58 missionaries
and 21 children), he refused to accept payment for loss of property or life. Rather
than punish the Chinese, he wanted to serve them. It was a decision that paid
dividends (at least spiritually!) gaining the missionaries a good deal of respect
and goodwill. Passing
on the baton Worn out, and expecting to die at any moment, Taylor decided
to retire. He appointed D E Hoste, a distinguished member of the Cambridge Seven
and leader of the work in Shansi and Honan, as acting General Director. The
increasingly frail Taylor retired to Switzerland for a well-earned rest, taking
walks with his beloved wife Jennie, who died of cancer in 1904. One
final voyage to China Despite his sadness Taylor rallied, and in February
1905, at the age of 73, he made his eleventh trip to China, accompanied by his
son Howard and daughter-in-law Geraldine. It would be his last. Taylor
landed in Shanghai on 17 April, spent Easter in Yangzhou, then travelled to Zhenjiang
to visit the cemetery where Maria, his first wife, and four of their children
were buried. He
met Dr Griffith John and Dr William Martin, two old missionary friends in Hangkou,
visited seven CIM mission stations in Henan, and eventually settled in Hunan province,
where 111 missionaries from 13 societies serving in 17 central stations worked
alongside Chinese Christians. It
was here, in Changsa, the capital, that Taylor ended his days, slipping quietly
away on 3 June 1905, after a tea party held in his honour. Taylor, who had been
going through his correspondence and reading the Missionary Review magazine in
bed suddenly appeared as if he was about to sneeze, then stopped breathing and
died. The man who had laboured for over 50 years to bring the gospel to China,
was no more. Taylors
legacy Missiologists and historians refer to Taylor as one of the
profoundest Christian thinkers of all time, a visionary pioneer
and one of the four or five most influential foreigners in 19th century
China. Taylors
own assessment was somewhat different: I often think that God must have
been looking for someone small enough and weak enough for Him to use, and that
He found me. In
1865 there was no Christian church anywhere in the interior of China. In 1910,
five years after Taylors death, the CIM had founded 611 organised churches
throughout China, with a total of over 20,000 communicant members. By 1915, churches
founded by a large variety of missions existed in every province as well as in
Manchuria, Mongolia and Turkestan. The
work now The name has changed we are now OMF International
and we currently have just under 1300 members from 30 nations working throughout
East Asia, and serving in Western nations where East Asians work or study. The
gospel continues to spread throughout China at a rate Taylor could only have dreamed
of and even countries closed to the gospel are now opening the door to Christians
with the right professional skills and qualifications to serve in East Asia. The
work started by James Hudson Taylor 140 years ago continues. The life and legacy
of Inland Chinas small and weak benefactor lives on. Edited
from an article by Gary Clayton, Managing Editor of East Asia's Billions. 
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