Today's promise: The whole earth will
hear
To those who have not
heard
My ambition has always
been to preach the Good News where the name of Christ has never been heard,
rather than where a church has already been started by someone else. I have
been following the plan spoken of in Scriptures, where it says, "Those who
have never been told about him will see, and those who have never heard of him
will understand."
Romans 15:20-21 NLT
Under a haystack
Williams College in
Williamstown, Massachusetts, was just twelve years old in 1805 when the Second
Great Awakening reached the school. In the spring of 1806 Samuel Mills joined
the freshman class with a passion to spread the gospel around the world. He
began leading a group of four other students, who met three afternoons a week
in a nearby maple grove.
One sultry day in
August 1806 a violent thunderstorm interrupted their prayer time, and they took
refuge on the sheltered side of a large haystack. God spoke to them as they
prayed, and four of the five committed themselves to serving God overseas if he
so led. The Haystack Prayer Meeting was not only the beginning of the first
American student mission society but also the beginning of the American foreign
missionary movement itself.
Two years later many
of the group enrolled at Andover Seminary where they were joined by Adoniram
Judson and others interested in foreign missions, but there was no foreign missions
board in America to send them. Acting on the advice of a teacher, the students
wrote a letter to the General Association of the Congregational Church. Two
days later, on June 29, 1810, the association responded by forming the
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
From that humble
beginning the foreign missions force of the United States has grown to over
sixty thousand missionaries sent out by hundreds of mission boards.
Adapted from The One Year® Book of Christian History by
E. Michael and Sharon Rusten (Tyndale, 2003), entry for June 29.
Content is derived
from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation and other publications of Tyndale
Publishing House
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