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CONTENTS - ISSUE NO. 54 |
Snehadeepam March / April 2007 Issue |
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Can You Say That?
"Lo, I am with you always, even unto the
end of the world." Matthew 28:20
His body is buried at Westminster Abbey but his heart
(literally) remains in Africa. When Robert Livingston, the
missionary doctor, died, the Africans removed his heart and
buried it in the land he loved. When he died, they found him
in prayer with his Bible opened to Matthew 28. Beside verse 20
he'd made this notation: "The Word of a Gentleman." Livingston
could easily have lived comfortably in his native Scotland.
What kept him in Africa? His arm was paralysed from a lion
attack, he'd suffered 27 bouts with jungle fever, and was
exhausted from battling slave traders. Addressing the
University of Glasgow, Livingston said, "What sustained me
amidst the trials, hardships and loneliness of my exiled life
was the promise of a gentleman of the most sacred honour: it
was this promise, 'Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end
of the world.' People talk about the sacrifice I've made. But
can it be called a sacrifice when it's simply paying back a
small part of a great debt I owe to God? A payment, that
brings peace of mind and the hope of a glorious destiny? It is
emphatically no sacrifice, it is a privilege!" As a man wept
openly at his funeral, a friend asked if he'd known Livingston
personally. He replied, "I weep not for Livingston, but for
myself. He lived and died for something, I have lived for
nothing."
Livingston's motto was, "I place no value on anything I have,
except in its relationship to the Kingdom of God." Can you say
that?
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