By Rev Dr Ed and
Janice Hird
While recently teaching on marriage in East Africa to tens
of thousands, we asked many Africans what they thought about Dr David
Livingstone. It was encouraging to learn how fondly he is remembered in Africa.
Some other westerners may have come to exploit, but Livingstone came to bless
and set free people free from their chains.
Livingstone prayed: “God, send me anywhere, only go with me. Lay any
burden on me, only sustain me, and sever any tie in my heart except the tie
that binds mine to yours.”
Dr Livingstone was one of the world’s greatest medical
missionaries, explorers and abolitionists. He originally trained as a doctor in
order to reach China with the gospel.
When that door closed because of the opium wars, God opened another door
to Africa, starting in Cape Town. Having received the Royal Geographic
Society’s highest golden medal, Livingstone lived in an era where no occupation
was more admired than that of an African explorer. It had the mystique of a modern-day
astronaut boldly going into unchartered territory. Travelling, said
Livingstone, made one more self-reliant and confident. He only wanted
companions who would go where there were no roads. His books were bestsellers
and his lectures standing room only. Crowds mobbed him in the streets and even
in church. One poll showed that only Queen Victoria was more popular than the
beloved Livingstone.
Many chiefs heard through Livingstone for the very first
time of Jesus’ amazing love. One chief
Sekelutu was drawn to Livingstone, but afraid to read the bible in case it
might change his heart and make him content with just one wife.
Livingstone literally filled in the map of Africa, exploring
all of its main rivers, covering 29,000 miles, greater than the circumference
of the earth. One of his most famous discoveries was the Victoria Falls, named
after Queen Victoria, on the Zambezi river.
During his extensive travels, he suffered over twenty-seven times from
attacks of malaria, being reduced at one point to ‘a mere skeleton’. His dear wife Mary tragically died from malaria
while traveling with her husband in Mozambique.
Livingstone had been lost for five years in Africa and
presumed dead by many. An American journalist Morton Stanley was sent by the
New York Herald in 1871 to Africa to rescue Livingstone. 236 days later, after
a seemingly hopeless search, Stanley found him, uttering the immortal words “Dr
Livingstone, I Presume.” His discovery was voted the greatest 19th century
newspaper story. Stanley called Livingstone “...an embodiment of warm good
fellowship, of everything that is noble and right, of sound common sense, of
everything practical and right/minded...”
Speaking to the 57 men carrying supplies to Livingstone, Stanley said:
“He is a good man and has a kind heart. He is different from me; he will not
beat you as I have done.” Queen Victoria went out of her way to thank Stanley
for discovering Livingstone, said that she had been very anxious about his
safety.
Livingstone called the Slave trade the open sore of the
world, believing that opening up trade routes would eliminate the Slave trade. His
on-location report of 400 slaves massacred by slave traders at Nyangwe was key
in ending the slave trade. He mistakenly thought that discovering the source of
the Nile would open up trade routes for Africans, ending their dependence on
the slave trade.
Livingstone was passionate about the Kingdom, praying: “I place no value in anything that I may
possess except in relation to the Kingdom of Christ. I shall promote the glory
of Him to whom I owe all my hopes in time and eternity.” Though his body was
buried at Westminster Abbey in London, his heart was buried in Africa, because
his heart was full of Jesus’ love for the African people. My prayer is that we too in Canada may have Jesus’
heart of love for Africa.
Rev. Dr. Ed and Janice Hird, co-author of For Better, For Worse: discovering the keysto a lasting relationship.
2 comments:
Heart-warming and deeply challenging, Ed. Livingstone's story always is!
Thank you for this beautiful biographical piece on his life and amazing ministry and his astounding commitment and love. I'd been to the Livingstone historical site and home in Blantyre, Scotland a number of times, in the 1950's and 60's. ~~+~~
Thanks so much, Peter
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