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C. T. Studd, 1862-1931: All for Christ
Over a hundred years ago, in February 1885, a group of young men set
sail from England to become missionaries in China. They included
graduates and ex-army officers and were known as the "Cambridge
Seven" because they had felt called to the mission field after attending
meetings at that University. The leading member of the group was
Charles T. Studd, the son of a wealthy indigo planter who had retired
from India to a large country house at Tidworth in Wiltshire. His
father had been converted in 1877 when a friend took him to hear
D. L. Moody preaching in London and he immediately gave up his pastimes
of racing and hunting, and used his home for evangelistic meetings
until his death two years later.
Charles and two of his brothers, Kynaston and George, were all at
Eton [College] when their father was converted and they were far
from pleased by his efforts to interest them in the gospel. However,
unknown to each other, all three were also converted when a visiting
preacher went to stay with the Studd family during the summer holidays
of 1878. The three brothers excelled at cricket both at Eton and
later at Cambridge where they achieved a remarkable record of each
captaining the cricket team in successive seasons from 1882 to 1884.
The exceptional skills shown by Charles gained him a place in the
England team in 1882 which lost the match to Australia which originated
the tradition of the "Ashes" between the two countries.
The following winter he toured Australia with the England team that
recovered the trophy, but in 1884 his brother George was taken seriously
ill and Charles was confronted by the question, "What is all
the fame and flattery worth...when a man comes to face eternity?" He
had to admit that since his conversion six years earlier he had been
in "an unhappy backslidden state." As a result of the experience
he stated, "I know that cricket would not last, and honour would
not last, and nothing in this world would last, but it was worth
while living for the world to come."
From then onwards Charles began witnessing to his friends and fellow
players and helping his brother Kynaston who had started organising
missions amongst students. Soon he had the joy of leading others
to the Lord and he prayed for power to be more effective in proclaiming
the gospel. Through the promise contained in Acts 1:8, "Ye shall
receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you; and ye
shall be witnesses unto me....unto the uttermost part of the earth,"
he realised that his own zeal and energy were not sufficient and
that he had to rely entirely upon God.
Up until that time he had felt content to witness amongst his own
associates but after hearing a missionary speaking about the need
for workers in China. Charles was increasingly burdened and convicted
by verses such as "Ask of me, and I shall give thee the heathen
for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy
possession." (Psalm 2:8). Although his friends and relatives tried to dissuade
him, Charles knew he was being called to the mission field and he
sought an interview with Hudson Taylor, the director of the China
Inland Mission and was accepted as an associate member.
Studd's decision was followed by six others within a few weeks and
as they prepared for the mission field, members of the "Cambridge
Seven" spoke at meetings up and down the country with remarkable
results. In addition to numerous conversions, a great wave of missionary
zeal swept through the students of Edinburgh, London, Oxford and
Cambridge which was to have profound effects throughout the world
in later years.
For C. T. Studd those future years were to see him giving away his
family inheritance to help the work of George Muller, D. L. Moody,
Dr. Barnardo and others and spending ten years in China where he
suffered great hardships to reach remote areas where the gospel had
never been heard before. On returning to England he was invited to
visit America where his brother Kynaston had recently arranged meetings
which had led to the formation of the Student Volunteer movement.
During this tour he experienced powerful blessing upon his ministry
and the spiritual life in many colleges, churches and other bodies
was radically transformed.
From 1900-1906 Studd was pastor of a church at Ootacamund in South
India and although it was a different situation to the pioneer missionary
work in China, his ministry was marked by numerous conversions amongst
the British officials and the local community. However, on his return
home Studd became concerned about the large parts of Africa that
had never been reached with the gospel and in 1910 he went to the
Sudan and was convicted by the lack of Christian witness in central
Africa. Out of this concern Studd was led to set up the Heart of
Africa Mission and when challenged as to why he was preparing for
a life of inevitable hardship he replied, "If Jesus Christ be
God and died for me, then no sacrifice can be too great for me to
make for Him."
On his first venture into the Belgian Congo in 1913, Studd established
four mission stations in an area inhabited by eight different tribes.
Then a serious illness to his wife required his return to England,
but when he returned to the Congo in 1916 she had recovered sufficiently
to undertake the expansion of the mission into the World Evangelism
Crusade with workers in South America, Central Asia and the Middle
East as well as Africa. Supported by his wife's work at home, Studd
built up an extensive missionary outreach based on his centre at
Ibambi and although [Mrs. Studd] made a short visit to the Congo
in 1928, that was the only time they met again since she died in
the following year. Two years later, still labouring for the Lord
at Ibambi at the age of seventy, Charles Studd died, but his vision
for China, India and Africa had expanded to reach the whole unevangelised
world.
Author unknown. Copyright ©1997
Heath Christian Book Shop Charitable Trust, United Kingdom.
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