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Mission Movement Inspired by William Carey

May 30, 1792.  William Carey inspired the first modern mission movement when he preached a sermon on Isiah 54:2-3 (““Enlarge the place of your tent,     stretch your tent curtains wide,  do not hold back…”)  He also wrote a missionary manifesto in which he called for the formation of a Baptist Missionary Society.  Carey himself went to India as a missionary, where Adoniram and Ann Judson came to him for baptism.  In 1818, the mission in India founded Serampore College to train indigenous ministers for the growing church and to provide education in the arts and sciences to anyone regardless of caste or country. ABHS has correspondence between Judson and Carey, as well as other correspondence and articles by Carey.  There are many books and articles about him, too.

 

American Baptist Magazine Began as Baptist Missionary Magazine

May 25, 1803.  The American Baptist magazine was formed by a vote of the Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Society.  Originally named The Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Magazine, the name was changed to The American Baptist Magazine in 1817 and to The Baptist Missionary Magazine in 1836.  In 1910 it combined with the Home Missions Monthly and the name was changed to Missions.  The ‘s’ was dropped in 1967, and  the magazine merged with Crusader in 1970 to become The American Baptist magazine.  ABHS has all the issues of this line of magazines.

Harry Emerson Fosdick Born in Buffalo

May 24, 1878.  Harry Emerson Fosdick, pastor, theologian, and peace and justice activist, was born in Buffalo. NY.  Graduating from Colgate University in 1900, and Union Theological Seminary in 1903, he was ordained and served churches in New Jersey and New York, including Riverside Church in Manhattan.    Fosdick became a central figure in the “Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy” within American Protestantism in the 1920s and 1930s and was one of the most prominent liberal ministers of the early 20th Century.  He presented the Bible as a record of the unfolding of God’s will, not as the literal “Word of God”. He saw the history of Christianity as one of development, progress, and gradual change.  ABHS has many books and articles about his life, and many more that he authored.

Foreign Mission Society Organized

May 21, 1814.  The precursor to today’s Board of International Ministries was founded in Philadelphia following the Triennial Convention (see May 18).  ABHS is the official repository of the archives of the foreign mission societies and IM.  It contains correspondence between missionaries in places like Congo, Burma and India and the sending agencies.

First Black Ordained in America

May 20, 1775.  George Liele  was formally ordained, the first black Baptist in America to be so.  A slave in South Carolina, Liele  was freed shortly after the beginning of the Revolution .   He supported the British in the war for independence, and after the war, migrated to Jamaica in 1783.  The following year he established the first Baptist church there which he named the Ethiopian Baptist Church.  Liele also established a school in Jamaica.  Deborah Van Broekhoven, ABHS’s Director Emeritus, is one of the editors of a George Liele’s Life and Legacy.  A portrait of Liele  by Averett Shannon hangs in the Reading Room at ABHS.

Organizing to Support Foreign Missions

May 18, 1814.  The Triennial Convention (so called because it met every 3 years) was organized in Philadelphia for the purpose of supporting foreign missions.  Luther Rice was one of the primary movers of this organization, which eventually transformed into International Ministries.  Rice was ordained with Adoniram Judson and sailed with him to India.  He returned to the United States primarily to encourage support for Judson’s mission in Burma.

Northern Baptist Convention Organized in DC

May 17, 1907.  The Northern Baptist Convention was organized at Calvary Baptist Church in Washington, DC.  A general meeting of all Baptist societies was called, and the American Baptist Home Mission Society, the American Baptist Publication Society and the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society responded. They formed a voluntary organization named the Northern Baptist convention.  ABHS holds the records of these societies (and others), and the American Baptist Quarterly published a chronology of the denomination in 1995.

John Leland –Advocate for Religious Freedom

May 14, 1754.  John Leland, leading Baptist advocate of religious freedom, was born in Grafton, MA. He was an outspoken abolitionist and an important figure in the struggle for religious liberty in the United States.   Leland also later opposed the rise of missionary societies among Baptists.  ABHS has many books with biographical information about Leland, and books and pamphlets of his writings.

Baptists Tried, Banished, Jailed

May 7, 1668.  Thomas Goold and two others were banished from Massachusetts because of their Baptist beliefs.  This followed a trial for his being absent from church. Even though the jury acquitted Goold, the judge fined him.  He refused to pay, so was imprisoned.  The Governor called for a debate about baptism on April 14 and 15, which Goold was judged to have lost, and so was banished with  William Turner, and John Farnum. They did not leave, however so were thrown in prison again.  After a year in prison Goold escaped with his family to semi-banishment on Noddle’s Island, located in the middle of Boston Harbor outside the court’s jurisdiction.

Boston Baptists Protest

May 5, 1773.  Boston area Baptists agreed to stop paying church taxes in protest of the establishment of a state religion.  Baptists and Boston authorities were often at odds regarding freedom of religion, and ABHS has many books and pamphlets that examine the issue.  (Use Foundations article for photo)

Charles Spurgeon Baptized at 16

May 3, 1850.  Charles Spurgeon, world-renowned Baptist preacher and writer was baptized at the age of 16.  Spurgeon was the pastor of the congregation of the New Park Street Chapel (later the Metropolitan Tabernacle) in London for 38 years.  Spurgeon produced powerful sermons of penetrating thought and precise exposition. His oratory skills held his listeners spellbound in the Metropolitan Tabernacle and many Christians hold his writings in exceptionally high regard among devotional literature.  ABHS has some of Spurgeon’s correspondence (1865-1890)  involving personal matters and pastoral concerns.  There are also many of Spurgeon’s writings in the Colgate Historical Collection.

Nannie Burroughs Born in Virginia

May 2, 1883. Nannie Helen Burroughs, editor and National Baptist Convention leader was born in Orange, VA.  She was president of the National Training School for Women and Girls which opened in 1909 in Washington, DC. She was known for her oratorical powers and executive ability.  She lectured in various parts of the country and wrote for denominational papers.  In 1905 she attended the World’s Baptist Congress in London and gave an address on ‘Woman’s Part in the World’s Work’.  ABHS has a vertical file and  several books with information about Burroughs.

Division over Slavery

May 1, 1845.  The Triennial Convention approved the (Executive) Committee’s recommendation that if a slave holder wanted to be a missionary, he or she had to be approved by the whole convention.   In the previous December, the Alabama Convention had sent a question about this, which the Committee answered.  This vote supported the Committee’s answer that it would be against their conscious to appoint a slave holder.  This was the reason that the southern churches withdrew and formed the Southern Baptist Church and their own Foreign Missionary Society.

Ellen Cushing, Educator, Dies

April 30, 1915:  Ellen Cushing died in Providence, RI.  Cushing was first an educator who assisted freed slaves in entering post-way society.  Later she went as a missionary to Burma with her husband, Josiah, where they collaborated on an English-Shan dictionary.  In the late 1890s, she started the Baptist Training Institute in Philadelphia to train single women missionaries.  The BTI later became Ellen Cushing College.