Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions eBook

Roland Allen
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 133 pages of information about Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions.

Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions eBook

Roland Allen
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 133 pages of information about Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions.
-------------------------------------------------------
--------------- 1st Grade. | 2nd. | 3rd.  To be Qualified Doctors. | Assistants, including Dispensers, |Nurses. | etc. | ------------------------------------------------------------
---------- | | | | ------------------------------------------------------------
----------

If we had those tables for men and women we should see fairly plainly how the work might be expected to develop.

But here we ought to remember the difficulty which we set forth earlier in discussing the missionary influence of our various activities, medical and educational, from a Church building point of view.  A great many boys are educated and trained at mission expense to be evangelists, medicals, and teachers in mission employ, who serve indeed for a period according to their contract and then disappear into Government service or private practice.  It is a serious question whether missionaries can be raised up successfully in this way.  “I will give you training if you will promise to serve the mission,” is not a very certain way of securing ready, wholehearted, zealous service of Christ.  We have found out its uncertainty in many cases at home; we have found it out in still more frequent cases in the mission field.  Unless we keep a very careful record of the after-life of those whom we train, and a very honest one, we are apt to ignore the failure, a failure which we cannot properly afford, and consequently we cannot know what we are really doing by our training.  We ought to know the truth in this matter, both for our encouragement and our admonition.  Happily here, we think, we can find an easy and a valuable test.  If we ask what proportion of those whom we train continue in their missionary work after the end of their first term of service, we shall certainly have some enlightenment; for it is true of medicals and educationalists, and of evangelists, though in a much less degree, that if any man continues in missionary work after he has fulfilled the letter of his contract, it will generally be because he has his heart in the work; for missionary work seldom, if ever, offers the emoluments of Government service, or of private practice.  We ask then—­

SURVEY OF WORK IN A PROVINCE

-------------------------------------------------------
-------------- |Evangelistic | Medical | Educational --------------------------------+-------------+---------+---
--------- Total Students | | | --------------------------------+-------------+---------+---
--------- Trained at Mission Expense, | | | Wholly or in Part. | | | --------------------------------+-------------+---------+---
--------- Number who Continue in | | |
Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign Missions from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.