A
frail young man, with sad, lustrous eyes and face so blanched that he seems
to be the palest of the palefaces, is engaged on a serious and dangerous
mission. Having heard of a tribe of particularly ferocious Indians living
in the dense forests of the region known as the "Forks of the Delaware," he
is on his way to tell them of a loving Saviour. Coming at sunset in sight
of the smoke of their campfires, he decides to spend the night in the woods
and to proceed in the morning. Little does he realize that several red men,
with wolfish eyes and as silent as serpents, have followed him for hours.
As he builds a fire, the Indians steal away to their encampment to tell the
startling news that a white man is in the woods nearby. "Let us go at
once," says the chief, "and kill this paleface, whose people have
taught us to drink firewater and then, while we are drunk, have taken our
baskets and skins and even our lands for almost nothing."
As the warriors silently draw near, they see the white man on his knees, praying
most fervently that the Indians might come to realize that the great God
of the universe loved them and sent His Son to save them. While he prays,
a rattlesnake squirms up to him, lifts its hideous head, flicks its forked
tongue close to his face, and then, for no apparent reason, glides away into
the darkness. And so does the chief, followed by his men.
When the young missionary enters the Indian village early the next morning,
he receives a much more cordial welcome than he had anticipated, for not
until later does he learn of the strange events of the preceding night. When
the people gather around him in an open place among the wigwams, he opens
his Bible, reads from the 53rd chapter of Isaiah and tenderly tells
the sweet story of how God sent His Son to die on the cross that He might
take away the sin from people's hearts and make them good children of the
Heavenly Father. At the close of his message there are tears in the eyes
of many of his auditors.
"The paleface is a praying man!" remarks one of the warriors who
had gone forth the preceding night intending to kill him.
"And the Great Spirit is with him!" says another, remembering how
the rattlesnake had mysteriously failed to strike.
"And he brings a wondrous sweet message!" says the squaw of the
Indian chief.
A Man in a Million
This young paleface was David Brainerd. He was born at Haddam, Connecticut,
April 20, 1718, and died on October 9, 1747, at the early age of 29. He is
remembered not only as the great Apostle to the North American Indians, but
also as a chief source of inspiration in the lives of thousands who have
been challenged from ease and selfishness to lives of holiness and sacrifice,
as they have prayed and wept over his Journal.
"Have a good look at him," writes F. W. Boreham; "he is a man
in a million; he did more than any other to usher in the world's new day."
"His story," as J. M. Sherwood says, "has done more to develop
and mold the spirit of modern missions, and to fire the heart of the Christian
Church, than that of any man since the apostolic age."
In answer to the question, "What can be done to revive the work of God
where it has decayed?" John Wesley said, "Let every preacher read
carefully the life of David Brainerd."
One of the many who heeded Wesley's counsel was William Carey, and God used
Brainerd's life story to open Carey's eyes to the need of all races everywhere
and to fire his heart with a passion to speed the gospel to "the uttermost
part." It was chiefly the reading of the story of Brainerd's heroic
missionary labors that thrust Henry Martyn out as a bundle of fire into
the darkness of India and Persia, and caused Robert McCheyne to become the
Apostle to the Jews. May some earnest-hearted young people reading this account
be similarly inspired to "burn out for God" in some needy foreign
land. May many others be shaken out of living, as Brainerd says, "at
the rate of common Christians," and be inspired to live lives of fervent
prayer, genuine piety and holy passion for souls. And may any hearts without
Christ be melted into penitence and saving faith as they read of God's marvelous
love revealed in His dear Son.
His Text and Conversion
Tradition says that Mary, the mother of Jesus, could never bear to read the 53rd
chapter of Isaiah, and if another should read it in her hearing,
she would break into weeping, as with grief inconsolable. This passage
was as bitter wormwood to her soul because it brought to her mind a vivid
recollection of that day when, through a fountain of tears, she beheld
her divine Son suffer and die on the cross.
Isaiah 53 reminded Mary of the tortures in Pilate's hall!
Isaiah 53 caused her to remember the horrors of the Via Dolorosa!
Isaiah 53 brought to her a vivid recollection of the sorrows of Golgotha!
Isaiah 53 was a fountain of wormwood to her soul!
But in this attitude Mary stands singularly alone. To a multitude that no
man can number the 53rd chapter of Isaiah has been precious beyond
all estimation.
It must have been so to the Ethiopian eunuch, ever after that memorable day
when Philip stepped into his chariot in the desert and, reading about the
Man of Sorrows, smitten and afflicted, "preached unto him Jesus."
This passage was very dear to the heart of Philip Melanchthon, Luther's valiant
helper. On the last Good Friday of his life, he prepared and delivered his
last sermon. And the theme of that final message was the 53rd chapter
of Isaiah!
John Knox prized this chapter more than any other. He often preached upon
it and, during his last illness, requested that it be read to him every day.
Dwight L. Moody was of one mind with Knox and Melanchthon in appreciation
of Isaiah's inspired description of the Suffering Servant. When the great
evangelist went to conduct his first campaign in London in 1874, he was asked
concerning his creed. "It is already in print," replied Mr. Moody. "You'll
find it in the 53rd chapter of Isaiah."
The 53rd chapter of Isaiah was exceedingly precious to David Brainerd.
When his soul was enveloped in blackness, the 53rd chapter of Isaiah became
a ladder of light leading from earth to heaven. When preaching to the Indians,
his favorite theme was Isaiah 53. And, when he came to the end of
his pilgrimage, the last sentence of the last entry he made in his Diary was
a quotation from the 53rd chapter of Isaiah!
At the early age of eight, as he himself expressly states, David came under "a
conviction of sin," and subsequently, for prolonged periods, his heart
was filled with the most melancholy forebodings. He was terrified at the
thought of death and often pictured himself descending into hell. His mood
was like that of John Bunyan when under deep conviction. Said Bunyan:
"I envied the toads in the ditch and the domesticated animals, for they
had no soul to perish as mine was like to do."
Said Brainerd: "I was much dejected and some times envied the birds and
beasts their happiness, because they were not exposed to eternal misery as
I knew myself to be."
It is interesting to note that John Wesley on one side of the Atlantic and
David Brainerd on the other were, at about the same time, passing through
a similar religious experience. Just as Wesley, prior to his conversion at
Aldersgate, sought spiritual peace by joining others in the Holy Club in
a continual round of religious observances, so Brainerd sought to satisfy
his soul's deep need of regeneration with the husks of external piety. He
attended church services faithfully, read the Scriptures through twice in
a single year and joined a group of young men meeting weekly for prayer and
Bible study. Others may have been deceived by his zeal, but he was not. "I
had a very good outside," he says. "Thus I proceeded a considerable
length on a self-righteous foundation."
Eventually the sublime truths embedded in the 53rd chapter of Isaiah guided
his wretched soul through the Wicket Gate and to the sight of the Cross,
where his burden, like Bunyan's, rolled away to be seen no more.
The 53rd chapter of Isaiah did three things for David Brainerd. It
revealed to him his own heart, full of vileness and corrupted by sin. He
not only assented to the statement, "all we like sheep have gone astray;" he
also came to see that only a terrible disease, humanly incurable, would have
called forth so great a remedy as the death of God's Son on the Cross. Thus
he was led to recognize that his indispensable need was not deeds of external
righteousness but the divine remedy of a new birth for the disease of a corrupted
nature. He finally realized that no struggles or reforms could change his
sin-corrupted nature and that the Law of God -- to quote his own words -- "condemned
me, not for outward actions but for the sins of my heart, which I
could not possibly prevent."
The 53rd chapter of Isaiah also revealed to him the Saviour's heart,
full of love and the excellencies of grace. When, in Bunyan's epic story,
Christiana's son James had read the 53rd of Isaiah as a part of family
worship, Greatheart sought to explain the majestic syllables, "He
hath no form or comeliness. He is a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." These
words were written, said Mr. Greatheart, "for those who lack the eye
that can see into our Prince's heart." The 53rd chapter of Isaiah was
like an open window, enabling Brainerd to peer into the heart of the Prince
of our salvation, and what he saw there melted his heart. His vision of the
Saviour's broken heart broke his own heart into penitence and glad surrender.
It was on Sunday evening, July 12, 1739, "as I was walking in a dark
thick grove," he writes in his Diary, "unspeakable glory
seemed to open to the view and apprehension of my soul. My soul was so captivated
with the excellency, loveliness, greatness, and other perfections of God
that I was even swallowed up in Him." On that never-to-be-forgotten
day Brainerd found in the Saviour's riven heart a stairway of light leading
to the Holy of Holies in the heart of God.
The 53rd of Isaiah also revealed to him a door of access to the heart
of all mankind. Having seen the need of his own depraved heart, he saw a
world of hearts in the same dark plight, and having found that the message
of the suffering Son of God was "wondrous sweet" to his own soul,
he believed that all other souls were eagerly waiting to hear the same sweet
story. He was convinced that Christ is the answer -- the only answer -- to
the deepest yearnings of the human spirit, just as water is the answer to
the thirst of the human body. Believing that others were just as thirsty
as he had been, he longed to proclaim far and wide, especially among the
neglected and mistreated Indians, the gospel invitation, "Let him that
is athirst come and take the water of life freely."
His Missionary Labors
Accordingly, after three years of study at Yale College, he became a missionary
to the Indians, under appointment of the Scottish Society for Promoting Christian
Knowledge.
On the way to his work among the Indians at Kaunaumeek, New York, he stopped
and preached at Montauk, Long Island, at that time chiefly inhabited by Indians;
and what was his text? He says: "I went and preached from Isaiah
53-- 'Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise him ... [and] make his soul an offering
for sin.'"
Jesus' death on the cross was part of the divine plan: "It pleased
the LORD to bruise him."
Jesus' death on the cross was the costly remedy for a terrible disease: " ...
an offering for sin."
Jesus' death on the cross would be divinely used to the salvation of multitudes: "The
pleasure of the LORD shall prosper in his hand ... and justify many."
Several months after reaching Kaunaumeek, the young missionary set aside a
day "for secret fasting and praying from morning till night." Thus
far he felt that his work had been a failure. He was overwhelmed by a sense
of his own unworthiness and of the obstacles confronting him, chiefly, the
depravity of the Indians and the weakened condition of his own pain-racked,
consumptive body. He read extensive passages from the Bible, "frequently
in the meantime," he states, "falling on my knees and crying to
God." As he read of the worthies of old and of how marvelously God had
used them, he longed to be like them. That day the pattern of his amazing
life was formed, as he solemnly consecrated himself to walk in the footsteps
of four of the heroes of the Bible. "O that I may be, as were they, aflame
for God," he prayed. That night he wrote in his Diary, "My
soul blessed God that He had shown Himself so gracious to His servants of
old."
Brainerd longed to be AFLAME FOR GOD, living, like Moses, a life of self-abasement
to His service and glory.
When God spoke out of the burning bush in Midian, He found Moses very different
from what he was forty years earlier. Then he was self-assertive, endeavoring
to deliver his enslaved brethren by his own hand and by his own ill-chosen
methods. Now he was self-abased, conscious of his inadequacy and unworthiness. "Who
am I," he said, "to undertake so great a task?" God could
and did use mightily one thus yielded and eager, not for self-glory but for
the glory of God. No man ever yearned more ardently to be like Moses, or
succeeded to a greater degree, than did David Brainerd. "I spent the
evening," he says, "praying incessantly that I might not be self-dependent
but have my whole dependence upon God." In a letter to his brother,
January 2,1744, he wrote:
"We should always look upon ourselves as God's servants, placed in God's
world to do His work; and accordingly labor faithfully for Him. Let it then
be your great concern, thus to devote yourself and your all to God."
His Diary contains innumerable passages of similar import to the following. "April
26,1742. Oh, that I could spend every moment of my life to God's glory!" "August
30, 1742. My soul longs with a vehement desire to live to God." "November
22, 1745. I have received my all from God. Oh that I could return my all
to God." Not in self-dependence but in God-dependence, Brainerd found
the source of unlimited power, the secret of a gallant spirit, the sacrament
of inward peace.
Self-abasement was not to Brainerd an end in it self. "It is so sweet," he
confides, "to be nothing and less than nothing" that Christ
may be "my all in all."
Oh, the bitter shame and sorrow
That a time could ever be
When I let the Saviour's pity
Plead in vain, and proudly answered:
"All of self, and none of Thee."
Yet He found me: I beheld Him
Bleeding on the accursed tree;
Heard Him pray, "Forgive them, Father,"
And my wistful heart said faintly:
"Some of self and some of Thee."
Day by day, His tender mercy,
Healing, helping, full and free,
Sweet and strong, and oh, so patient,
Brought me lower, while I whispered:
"Less of self and more of Thee."
Higher than the highest heaven,
Deeper than the deepest sea,
Lord, Thy love at last has conquered:
Grant me now my soul's desire,
"None of self and all of Thee."
Brainerd longed to be AFLAME FOR GOD, being, like Elijah, a man fervent
and mighty in prayer.
His soul "was much moved" as he read the story of Elijah the prophet,
who, by laying hold upon God in prayer, was sustained in all his trials and
was enabled to overcome the priests of Baal on Mount Carmel, to call a multitude
to repentance and to bring down rain upon a famished earth. Thereupon, says
Brainerd: "My soul breathed after God, and pleaded with Him, that 'a
double portion of that spirit' which was given to Elijah, might 'rest on
me.'"
He usually spent several hours a day in prayer and frequently devoted an entire
day to this purpose. June 14, 1742, he writes: "I set apart this day
for secret fasting and prayer. Just at night the Lord visited me marvelously.
I wrestled for an ingathering of souls ... I was in such an agony from sun
half an hour, till near dark, that I was all over wet with sweat. Oh, my
dear Saviour did sweat blood for poor souls. I went to bed with my heart
wholly set on God."
Brainerd discovered the reality of prayer: "The Lord visited me marvelously."
Brainerd experienced the agony of prayer: "I wrestled for souls ...
in agony."
Brainerd discerned the resources of prayer "treasures of divine grace
were opened to me."
Brainerd learned the transforming power of prayer: "My heart was wholly
set on God."
July 21,1744, on hearing that the Indians were planning to hold an idolatrous
feast and dance the next day, he spent a day and night in prayer. He writes: "This
morning about nine I withdrew to the woods for prayer. I was in such anguish
that when I rose from my knees I felt extremely weak and overcome, and the
sweat ran down my face and body ... I cared not where or how I lived, or
what hardships I went through, so that I could but gain souls for Christ.
I continued in this frame all the evening and night."
Thus empowered, he went forth to meet the Indians the next morning, convinced
that God was with him in this contest just as He was with Elijah on Mount
Carmel; and, wonder of wonders, instead of promptly scalping him when he
called upon them to stop their dance, they actually desisted and listened
to the missionary preach, both morning and afternoon.
Made strong by prayer and the awareness of the divine companionship, Brainerd
dragged his tortured body through the forests from village to village, preaching
with such tenderness and conviction that the stony-hearted Indians were frequently
melted to tears.
Brainerd longed to be AFLAME FOR GOD, his life, like Abraham's, being characterized
by the holy piety of one on pilgrimage to eternity.
In his Diary Brainerd makes frequent reference to the ancient patriarch.
He spoke of "Abraham's pilgrimage" and of "what a stranger
he was here on earth." He longed to be like Abraham and the worthies
referred to in Hebrews 11:13, who "confessed that they were strangers
and pilgrims on the earth." As a citizen of heaven, he felt that he
should be insensible to the enjoyments of this world. "My desires," he
wrote on July 19, 1742, "seem especially to be after weanedness from
the world, perfect deadness to it, and that I may be crucified to
all its allurements. My soul desires to feel itself more of a pilgrim and stranger here
below, that nothing may divert me from pressing through the lonely desert,
till I arrive at my Father's house."
Being on such a pilgrimage, he was filled with the most intense longings after
holiness and sanctification. "Blessed Jesus," he prayed, "may
I daily be more and more conformed to Thee. All I want is to be more holy,
more like my dear Lord ... that I may be fit for the blessed enjoyments and
employments of the heavenly world." As a "pilgrim here below," Brainerd
was animated by a threefold yearning: to be crucified to the allurements
of this world, to be conformed daily to the holy purposes of Christ, to be
made fit for the enjoyments and employments of heaven!
Brainerd frequently felt himself cast down into the dust because of his sinfulness
and spiritual deadness. "What a vile wretch I am!" he exclaims. "Oh
that I could give up myself to God, so as nevermore to attempt to be my own,
or to have any will or affections that are not perfectly conformed to Him!
But alas, alas! I find I cannot be thus entirely devoted to God."
Few men have ever exposed their inmost souls as did Brainerd; and yet it should
be remembered that he had no idea that any other eye than his own would ever
see his private writings. If a saint is one who lives in time with a view
to eternity, no saintlier man ever lived than David Brainerd. "I love
to live," he said, "on the brink of eternity."
Brainerd longed to be AFLAME FOR GOD, living, like Paul, to preach Christ
and to share His sufferings unto the salvation of souls.
His Diary contains this entry, July 6,1744: "I long and love to
be a pilgrim; and want grace to imitate the life, labors and sufferings of
Paul among the heathen." He and Paul were kindred spirits in being captivated
and animated by one great design -- the salvation of lost souls, and in believing
that this objective could best be attained by preaching the gospel of Christ
and by living a life of self-denial and sacrifice.
Brainerd and Paul were kindred spirits!
Captivated by one grand design-- "to testify the gospel of the grace
of God."
Animated by one superb longing-- "to fill up that which is lacking
of the sufferings of Christ."
"I long to imitate the life, labors and sacrifices of Paul among
the heathen."
Almost every page of Brainerd's Diary tells how he "endured hardship
as a good soldier of Jesus Christ." His sufferings, caused by a diseased
and weakened constitution, were intensified by the rigors of his life among
the Indians and his arduous travels through the wilderness. Concerning his
first night among the Indians, he made this entry, "I rode to Kaunaumeek
and there lodged on a little heap of straw."
He was frequently in distress for lack of suitable food, exposed to hunger
and cold, lost in the forests, caught in storms with no shelter available,
obliged to ford raging streams and to spend the night in the woods, in peril
from wild beasts and wild savages. Concerning one such incident he relates, "About
six at night I lost my way in the wilderness, and wandered over rocks and
mountains, through swamps and most dreadful places. I was pinched with cold
and distressed with an extreme pain in my head and stomach, so that much
blood came from me. But God preserved me, and, blessed be His name, such
fatigues and hardships as these seem to wean me more from the earth and I
trust will make heaven the sweeter." This man was no secluded saint.
He was apostolic in his labors and in the way he gloried in tribulation.
Brainerd's health was failing fast and he gave some consideration to the idea
of giving up his missionary journeys and settling down, either among his
Christian Indians or at one of the white churches which had extended to him
a call. This prospect was immeasurably enhanced by his dreams of domestic
felicity, for he was ardently attached to Jerusha Edwards. He realized, however,
that he had at most a year or two longer to live, and concluded, after much
struggle of soul, that he should "burn out to the last" as a traveling
missionary. Falling on his knees in his resignation, he cried: "Farewell
friends and earthly comforts; farewell to the dearest, the very dearest of
them all. I will spend my life to my latest moments in caves and dens of
the earth, if the kingdom of Christ may thereby be advanced."
During the last months of his life, Jerusha was his nurse and constant companion;
and so heartbroken was she at the death of her beloved, she faded like a
flower famished for rain, and, just four months later, went to join him in
the Celestial City.
Brainerd, like Paul, gloried in the Cross and determined to preach nothing "save
Jesus Christ and him crucified." He made Christ the center and goal
of every message. "If I treated on the being and glorious perfections
of God," he wrote, "I was thence naturally led to discourse of
Christ as the only way to the Father. If I attempted to open the deplorable
misery of our fallen state, it was natural from thence to show the necessity
of Christ to undertake for us, to atone for our sins and to redeem us from
their power." The Apostle to the Indians proved, not only that the preaching
of "gospel truth" is the only thing that can melt savage hearts
to repentance, but also is the only means by which to reform and transform
their lives. Just as soon as the Indians were changed at heart, they gave
up their heathen vices.
At the end of one year of labor at Kaunaumeek, Brainerd persuaded the Indians
to move to Stockbridge, where they came under the ministry of a Mr. Sargeant
and later of Jonathan Edwards. Henceforth his parish centered in the area
of the forks of the Delaware and extended through wide areas of New Jersey
and Pennsylvania. He made the Indian town of Crossweeksung his headquarters
and there erected a little hut. For a considerable time he was greatly depressed
by the heathen practices of the Indians, by the darkness of their minds and
the hardness of their hearts. But he kept on sowing the gospel seeds and
watered them with his tears, for he believed "the promises of God." Often
he retired into the forest recesses, and the leafy solitudes echoed with
the pleadings of his anguished heart on behalf of his "poor Indians."
The promises! The sure promises of God!
"Sow in tears ... reap in joy!"
"Call upon me and I will answer!"
Echoes among the leafy solitudes!
Pleadings of his anguished heart!
At length a mighty revival broke out in Susquehannah, and the reaper with
joy gathered the precious sheaves. One day while preaching on Isaiah 33, "the
Word was attended with amazing power; many scores in that great assembly
were much affected, so that there was a very great mourning among them." Suddenly
there fell among the Indian population of this area a sense of soul concern.
From all directions they came, crowding around the missionary to hear his
message and falling down with sobs and groans under conviction of sin. A
besotted woman fell down crying, "Have mercy upon me, O Lord." An
elderly man, who had been a murderer, a pow-wow (or conjuror), and a notorious
drunkard, cried for mercy with many tears. Scores were soundly converted
and came to be known as "Praying Indians," for, like their missionary,
they spent much time in importunate prayer for the salvation of their people.
And what was the message that produced such remarkable results? When one
of the men was asked, "Why do you cry so?" he replied, "When
I think how Christ was slain like a lamb and spilt His blood for sinners,
I cannot help crying." It was the message of Isaiah 53! And when
Brainerd called his Christian Indians together for their first communion
and talked to them of the great sacrifice represented by the sacred emblems,
the whole company was dissolved in tears.
Sweeping Through the Gates
During the conversation in the Palace Beautiful, Christian confessed that
he sometimes lost his ardor on the pilgrimage. When Prudence inquired how
he was enabled to revive his heart and press on his journey, Christian replied, "When
I think of where I am going -- that will do it!" It was the same
with David Brainerd.
After five years of arduous travel, manifold hardships, and almost incessant
pain, the frail consumptive, spitting blood and almost delirious with fever,
stumbles down the road to Northampton to die in the home of Jonathan Edwards.
But he is by no means despondent. He is thinking of where he is going and
his soul is exultingly happy. The pilgrim has finished his course and waits
eagerly for the chariot to take him home. When someone comes into his room
with a Bible, he exclaims: "Oh, that dear Book! I shall soon see it
opened! The mysteries that are in it will all be unfolded!"
As his physical powers wane, his spiritual perception heightens. "I was
made for eternity," he whispers. "How I long to be with God and
to bow in His presence." The light of another world is in his eyes as
he murmurs, "Oh that the Redeemer may 'see of the travail of his soul
and be satisfied.' Oh come, Lord Jesus! Come quickly!" And with this
petition upon his lips he greets Death as a long-awaited friend, who will
forthwith usher him into the presence of the King!
Brainerd's Diary and Journal reveal an ardent and oft reiterated
yearning to "burn out" for his Lord and to be "aflame for
God." "It is my fervent longing," he said, "to be a flame
of fire, continually glowing in the divine service, till my latest, my dying
moment."
To the very last, Brainerd was supremely concerned with the extension of the
kingdom of his "blessed Redeemer," the suffering Christ Isaiah
53.
On his deathbed he prayed that He who "was bruised for our iniquities" might "see
of the travail of His soul and be satisfied." October 9, 1747, he experienced the
ineffable joy, which, in prospect, had so long cheered his lonely
and heroic pilgrimage -- namely, "to be absent from the body, and to
be present with the Lord."
The flame that burned so brightly and glowed so warmly seems to have burned
out at last. But it only seems so. Death is life's sublimest illusion. For
those "in Christ" there is no death, there are no dead. The
event called death does not extinguish, but rather intensifies, the vital
flame of life and service. "He is not dead." The sweet and consecrated
spirit of David Brainerd is "continually glowing in the divine service
and, to a degree beyond all his imagining, he is still AFLAME FOR GOD.
Used with permission. Copied by Stephen Ross for WholesomeWords.org from Heroes of Faith on Pioneer
Trails by E. Myers Harrison. Published by Moody Press, Chicago,
Illinois, c1945.
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