White Queen of the Cannibals: the Story of Mary Slessor by A. J. Bueltmann
page 99 of 147 (67%)
page 99 of 147 (67%)
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love. They wanted to marry.
"I will marry you if the Mission Board will agree to letting you work in the jungle with me," said Mary. "But suppose the Board will not let me go into the jungle, wouldn't you be willing to come back to Duke Town with me?" asked Charles. "No, Charles, I couldn't. I love you very much, more than anyone I have ever known, but my work for God is in the jungles. There no one else has yet planted the Gospel seed. To leave a field like Okoyong without a worker and go to one like Duke Town with ten or a dozen workers where the people have the Bible and plenty of privileges--that's foolish. If God does not send you into the jungle with me, then you must do your work and I must do mine where we have been placed." It was not long after Mary had returned to England that the Mission Board gave its answer to her request. The answer was no. "What the Lord decides is right," said Mary. "I believe that the Mission Board is giving me God's answer because they are His servants." What Mary suffered no one knew. She longed to have a life's partner by her side in the great work of bringing the Gospel to the jungle, but having given her life to God, she felt that He must be her first love. Charles Morrison, however, took the refusal very hard. He became sick and had to go home. Later he went to America where he died. Now that Mary was home in England, she soon got over the jungle fevers. People wanted to hear about the missionary work in Africa. Mary |
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