Life of John Coleridge Patteson : Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,026 pages of information about Life of John Coleridge Patteson .

Life of John Coleridge Patteson : Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,026 pages of information about Life of John Coleridge Patteson .

’In our work (and so I suppose in a Sunday school) one must think out each step, anticipate each probable result, before one states anything.  It is of course full of the highest interest.  Can’t you fancy a party of twenty or thirty dark naked fellows, when (having learnt to talk freely to them) I question them about their breakfast and cocoa-nut trees, their yams and taro and bananas, &c., “Who gave them to you?  Can you make them grow?  Why, you like me and thank me because I give you a few hatchets, and you have never thought of thanking Him all these long years.”

’"It is true, but we didn’t think.”

’"But will you think if I tell you about Him?”

’"He gave them rain from heaven and fruitful seasons.”

’How it takes one back to the old thoughts, the true philosophy of religion.  Sometimes I lie awake and think “if Jowett and others could see these things!”

’And yet, if it is not presumptuous in me to say so, I do think that this work needs men who can think out principle and supply any thoughtful scholar or enquirer with some good reason for urging this or that change in the manners and observances of the people.  Often as I think of it, I feel how greatly the Church needs schools for missionaries, to be prepared not only in Greek and Latin and manual work, but in the mode of regarding heathenism.  It is not a moment’s work to habitually ask oneself, “Why feel indignant?  How can he or she know better?” It is not always easy to be patient and to remember the position which the heathen man occupies and the point of view from which he must needs regard everything brought before him.

’Thank you for Maclear’s book.  It is a clear statement of the leading facts that one wishes to know, a valuable addition to our library.  You know, no doubt, a book which I like much, Neander’s “Light in Dark Places.”

’I shall remember about Miss Mackenzie’s memoir of that good Mrs. Robertson.  I wonder that men are not found to help Mr. Robertson.  Here, as you know, the climate (as in Central Africa) is our difficulty.  I think sometimes I make too much of it, but really I don’t see how a man is to stand many months of it.  But I can’t help thinking and hoping that if that difficulty did not exist I could see my way to saying, “Now, a missionary is wanted for these four or five or six islands, one for each, and a younger man as fellow-helper to that missionary,” and they would be forthcoming.

’Yet doubtless I don’t estimate fairly the difficulties and hardships as they appear to the man who has never left England, and is not used to knocking about.  I should have felt the same years ago but for the thought of being with the Primate, at least I suppose so.

’Well, I have written a very dull letter, but the place from which it comes will give it some interest.  I really think that not Mota only, but the Banks Islands are in a hopeful state.

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Life of John Coleridge Patteson : Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.