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In 1722 Count Nicholaus
von Zinzendorf of Saxony founded a colony of pietist believers called
"hernhut
" later known as Moravians. He also traveled to America and
set up communities that began to send out missionaries
first to Greenland
then to the West Indies
then beyond. By the time Zinzendorf died in 1760 some
300 missionaries
all laypersons
had gone out from the various colonies. in
1738 when some of the challenges of missionary life had become clear
Zinzendorf wrote his famous instructions
many of which sound strangely modern
despite their 18th century language. It is better to send people into the wide
world than to send no one. But you should be warned about the following
temptations:
1. To have even the
slightest dealings with clergymen.
2. To think about your purpose in the land only when you get there.
3. To test your vocation on the heathen once you are among
them.
4. To give up because something doesn't work immediately.
5. To begin to make your home too comfortable
forgetting that you are really a
traveler
a pilgrim among the nations.
6. To be prejudiced against the heathen because they are neither efficient nor
pious
and to be irritated by how badly they run things.
7. To seek even the slightest advantage at the expense of your brothers.
8. To fill up whole diaries with descriptions of difficulties but write little
or nothing about the ways in which our Savior has helped you.
9. To forget that one can do far more with a believing heart than with many
words.
10. To judge your colleagues and particularly your superiors according to their
personalities and then allow your relationship to be influenced by whether or
not you approve of them.
11. To make a general rule of the experience you and two or three others have
had.
12. To make so many plans that in the end you can't carry out any of them
but
throw up the whole task.
13. Out of boredom to make up new articles of faith.
14. Vindictiveness
15. To lose sight of the Savior.
16. Letting a quarrel last longer than a day.
17. To reflect and think that if you were somewhere else you would not have to
die
or that things would be different for you; to think that the present lot
which God has given to you can be avoided.
18. For any pretext or whatever reason to give the devil an opportunity to
outwit us
to cast us down or to rob us of our peace.
19. It is not always a bad sign to be troubled by something.
20. To embellish the heathen with names of people
not even those of Luther
Herrnhut
or Zinzendorf.
Source Unknown.
The Order of the Mustard
Seed founded by Count Zinzendorf had three guiding principles
namely:
1. Be kind to all people.
2. Seek their welfare.
3. Win them to Christ.
Source Unknown.
I was weeping in the most
bitter contrition of my heart
when I heard the voice of children from a
neighboring house chanting
"take up and read; take up and read." I
could not remember ever having heard the like
so checking the torrent of my
tears
I arose
interpreting it to be no other than a command from God to open
the book and read the first chapter I should find. Eagerly then I returned to
the place where I had laid the volume of the apostle. I seized
opened
and in
silence read that section on which my eyes first fell: "Not in revelry and
drunkenness
not in licentiousness and lewdness
not is strife and envy; but
put on the Lord Jesus Christ
and make no provision for the flesh
to fulfill
its lusts." No further would I read
nor did I need to. For instantly at
the end of this sentence
it seemed as if a light of serenity infused into my
heart and all the darkness of doubt vanished away.
Augustine.
The following
biographical/devotional is taken from Prodigals and Those Who Love Them
Ruth Bell Graham
1991
Focus on the Family Publishing
Page 3-11:
Few men are so great that
the main course of history is different just because they lived
thought and
spoke. Saint Augustine is one of those few. He is a great "bridge
personality" of history. Christopher Dawson has written of him
in St.
Augustine and His Age
"He was to a far greater degree than any emperor or
barbarian warlord
a maker of history and a builder of the bridge which was to
lead from the old world to the new." In a little room off the King's
Library in the British Museum a small exhibit is devoted to Augustine
who
lived from A.D. 354 to 430. The exhibit consists chiefly of specimens of his
writings
with copies of works that range from the Dark Ages to the first
scholarly edition in the seventeenth century. The display gives some indication
of his extraordinary popularity throughout the age of faith.
Augustine's works were
more widely read than any other author's from the eighth through the twelfth
centuries
and even during the late Middle Ages he was constantly being
rediscovered by clever men.
He speaks to this present
age as mightily and sweetly as he spoke to the age of dying Roman Imperialism
because "hearts speak to hearts
" and if ever there was a great heart
to speak
it was his
and if ever there were small and frightened hearts who
need his words
they are ours. But Augustine's early life gave no indication he
was to become such a strong voice of faith. He was born in Tagaste
a small
town in what is known today as Algeria
but during his teenage years his family
moved to Carthage in the part of North Africa that belonged to Rome.
His devout mother
Monica
taught her young son carefully and prayerfully. His brilliance concerned her
deeply
especially when
as a young man
he cast off his simple faith in Christ
for current heresies and a life given over to immorality.
Later
Augustine wrote:
I could not distinguish
between the clear shining of affection and the darkness of lust. . .I could not
keep within the kingdom of light
where friendship binds soul to soul .. .And
so I polluted the brook of friendship with the sewage of lust. The details of
his sin may differ from ours. (He had a mistress for many years and an
illegitimate son.) But Augustine's story is still the story of many of us: The
loss of faith always occurs when the senses first awaken. At this critical
moment
when nature claims us for her service
the consciousness of spiritual
things is
in most cases
either eclipsed or totally destroyed. It is not
reason which turns the young man from God; it is the flesh. Skepticism but
provides him with the excuses for the new life he is leading. This started
Augustine was not able to pull up halfway on the road of pleasure; he never did
anything by halves. In the vulgar revels of a wild youth
he wanted again to be
best
to be first
just as he was at school. He stirred up his companions and
drew them after him. They in their turn drew him. Still his mother prayed
though
as Augustine recalls
it showed no result.
I will now call to mind my
past foulness
and the carnal corruptions of my soul; not because I love them
but that I may love You
O my God. For the love of Your love I do it; reviewing
my most wicked ways in the very bitterness of my remembrance
that You may grow
sweet unto me (Your sweetness never failing
Your blissful and assured
sweetness); and gathering me again out of my excess
wherein I was torn piecemeal
while turned from You
the One Good
I lost myself among a multiplicity of
things...I was grown deaf by the clanking of the chain of my morality
the
punishment of the pride of my soul
and I strayed further from You
and You
left me alone
and I was tossed about
and wasted and dissipated
and I boiled
over in my fornications
and You held Your peace
O Thou my tardy joy!...I went
to Carthage
where shameful loves bubbled around me like a boiling oil.
Carthage made a strong
impression on Augustine. For a young man to go from little Tagaste to Carthage
was about the same as one of our youths going from the small community of
Montreat
North Carolina
to Los Angeles. In fact
Carthage was one of the five
great capitals of the Roman Empire. A seaport capital of the whole western
Mediterranean
Carthage consisted of large new streets
villa
temples
palaces
docks and a variously dressed cosmopolitan population. It astonished
and delighted the schoolboy from Tagaste. Whatever local marks were left about
him
or signs of the rube
they were brushed off in Carthage.
Here Augustine remained
from his seventeenth to his twenty-eighth year. He absorbed all Carthage had to
offer
including the teachings of the Manichaeans (a religious sect from
Persia).
Augustine recalled those
dark days and his mother's continued intercession on his behalf: Almost nine
years passed
in which I wallowed in the mire of that deep pit
and the
darkness of falsehood (Manichaeism)...All which time that chaste
godly and
sober widow...ceased not at all hours of her devotions to bewail my case unto
You. And her prayers entered into Your presence; and yet You suffered (allowed)
me to be yet involved and re-involved in that darkness. He also recalled how
God comforted his mother during that time
showing her that all things would
eventually work together for good. First He gave her a vision: She saw herself
standing on a certain wooden rule
and a shining youth coming towards her
cheerful and smiling upon her...He having...enquired of her the causes of her
grief and daily tears
and she answering that she was bewailing my perdition
he bade her rest contented
and told her to look and observe
"That where
she was
there was I also." And when she looked
she saw me standing by her
in the same rule.
Desperate over his
Manichaean heresy
Monica begged a bishop
a man deeply read in the Scriptures
to speak with her son and refute his errors. But Augustine's reputation as an
orator and dialectician was so great that the holy man dared not try to compete
with such a vigorous jouster. He answered the mother wisely that a mind so
subtle and acute could not long continue in such adroit but deceptive
reasoning. And he offered his own example
for he
too
had been a Manichaean.
But Monica pressed him
with entreaties and tears. At last the bishop
annoyed by her persistence and
moved by her tears
answered with a roughness mingled with kindness and
compassion
"Go
go! Leave me alone. Live on as you are living. It is not
possible that the son of such tears should be lost."
In his twenty-ninth year
Augustine longed to go to Rome
the most magnificent city in the world
the
seat of learning and
to many
the center of the universe. Fearing for the
spiritual and moral well-being of her son
Monica pled unceasingly with him not
to go. But the day came that she watched with apprehension the tall masts of
the ship in the harbor
as they swayed gently above the rooftops. She had
waited all day with Augustine in the debilitating heat for the right tide and wind
for him to sail to Rome. Augustine persuaded his mother to seek a little rest
in the coolness of a nearby chapel. Exhausted
she promptly fell asleep. At
dawn she awoke and searched the rooftops for the masts of the ship. It was
gone.
But Augustine's heart was
heavy
heavier than the air weighted by the heat and sea-damp -- heavy from the
lie and the cruelty he had just committed. He envisioned his mother awakening
and her sorrow. His conscience was troubled
overcome by remorse and
forebodings. He later wrote: I lied to my mother
and such a mother
and
escaped...That night I privily departed
but she was not behind in weeping and
prayer. And what
O Lord
was she with so many tears asking of You
but that
You would not permit me to sail? But You
in the depth of Your counsels and
hearing the main point of her desire
(regarded) not what she then asked
that
You (might) make me what she ever asked.
Augustine was guided to
Rome and then farther north where
after listening to Saint Ambrose
bishop of
Milan and the most eminent churchman of the day
he left the Manichaeans
forever and began again to study the Christian faith. One day
under deep
conviction: I cast myself down I know not how
under a certain fig-tree
giving
full vent to my tears; and the floods of mine eyes gushed out an
"acceptable sacrifice to You." And
not indeed in these words
yet to
this purpose
spake I much unto You: "and You
O Lord
how Long? How long
Lord
(will) You be angry
for ever? Remember not our former iniquities
"
for I felt that I was held by them. I sent up these sorrowful words: How long
how long
"to-morrow
and to-morrow?" Why not now? why not is there
this hour and end to my uncleanness? So was I speaking and weeping in the most
bitter contrition of my heart
when
lo! I heard from a neighboring house a
voice
as of boy or girl
I know not
chanting and oft repeating
"Take up
and read; Take up and read." Instantly
my countenance altered
I began to
think most intently whether children were wont in any kind of play to sing such
words; nor could I remember ever to have heard the like.
So checking the torrent of
my tears
I arose; interpreting it to be no other than a command from God to
open the book
and read the first chapter I should find... Eagerly then I returned
to the place where Alypius (his friend) was sitting; for there had I laid the
volume of the Apostle when I arose thence. I seized
opened
and in silence
read that section on which my eyes first fell: "Not in rioting and
drunkenness
not in chambering and wantonness
not in strife and envying; but
put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ
and make no provision for the flesh..."
No further would I read; nor needed I for instantly at the end of this
sentence
by a light as it were of serenity infused into my heart
all the
darkness of doubt vanished away.
Then putting my finger
between
or some other mark
I shut the volume
and with a calmed countenance
made it known to Alypius. And what was wrought in him
which I knew not
he
thus showed me. He asked to see what I had read: I showed him; and he looked
even further than I had read
and I knew not what followed. This followed
"Him that is weak in the faith
receive;" which he applied to
himself
and disclosed to me. And by this admonition was he strengthened; and
by a good resolution and purpose
and most corresponding to his character
wherein he did always very far differ from me
for the better
without any
turbulent delay he joined me.
(Then) we go in to my
mother
we tell her; she (rejoices): we relate in order how it took place; she
leaps for joy
and...blessed You
"Who (are) able to do (more than what)
we ask or think"; for she perceived that You (had) given her more for me
than she was wont to beg by her pitiful and most sorrowful groanings.
As we know
Augustine
would go on to more than fulfill all his godly mother's hopes and prayers
becoming a bishop and a defender of the truth. Having come home at last
this
prodigal would help build a house of faith that stands to this day. In the
words of Malcolm Muggeridge: "Thanks largely to Augustine
the light of
the new Testament did not go out with Rome's but remained amidst the debris of
the fallen empire to light the way to another civilization
Christendom."
As for Monica
her work on
earth was done. One day shortly after Augustine's conversion
she announced to
him that she had nothing left to live for
now that she had achieved her
lifelong quest of seeing him come to faith in Christ. Just nine days later
she
died.
In the Bible we read of a
prodigal whose father kept a vigil for his return
seeing him when he was
"yet a great way off." We who are spiritual beneficiaries of
Augustine can be thankful that Monica was an equally loving but not so passive
parent.
Whenever Augustine ran
she followed him; whenever he came home
she challenged his rebellious ways.
For Augustine
she surely embodied on earth what he and many other prodigals
have learned about our heavenly Father -- a truth best stated in this quotation
from the Confessions: "The only way a man can lose You is to leave You;
and if he leaves You
where does he go? He can run only from Your pleasure to
Your wrath."
J.S. Bach's first
biographer
Forkel
tells that young Johann Sebastian discovered that his
brother had in his music cabinet a special book of compositions by some of the
more established composers of that day
such as Pachelbel
Froberger
Bohm
and
Buxtehude. He wanted to borrow the book
but for some reason his brother
refused. Perhaps brother Johann Christoph was reserving those pieces for his
own study or performances and didn't want the talented youngster in his home to
perfect the works first. Johann Sebastian clearly coveted his brother's book
however
and in the middle of the night
when everyone else in the house was
asleep
he crept down to sneak the anthology from the cabinet. He took it to
his room and began to copy it by moonlight! It took him six months. Johann
Christoph found out about it...and promptly impounded the copied volume. Johann
Sebastian did not get the book back until his brother died almost a
quarter-century later.