| By
John Allen Moore
Lottie
Moon lost one administrative friend in June 1893 when
Henry Allen Tupper resigned as Foreign Mission Board
corresponding secretary at age 65 after 21 exhausting
years. But Robert J. Willingham, who also would become
a supporter of Lottie, succeeded him. A few months
later Lottie said goodbye to her sister, Eddie, and
before the end of the year was back in Tengchow-really
"at home."
Eight
Southern Baptist missionary men and women now made
up the north China mission. Lottie could have claimed
the pleasant, growing work around Pingtu-people there
adored her-but she left it to younger missionaries,
visiting there less and less often. She went instead
to Tengchow where she visited regularly in many homes
and toured among a hundred or so villages with a day's
reach of the city. She made fewer long evangelistic
tours.
Though
she suffered chronic throat and other health problems,
Lottie spent long periods nursing seriously ill members
of her mission and some among the Presbyterians. Realizing
the need to care for herself, she took daily cold
baths and usually a shampoo (she thought "a very
hot head at night meant loss of sleep"). She
ate a tomato a day and took a quarter-hour nap after
lunch. She made July vacation time in Tengchow, catching
up on reading and writing, attending to local school
and church duties, but avoiding extensive travel.
Visitors
from villages stayed with her for days or weeks at
a time, some indigent guests semipermanently. She
never turned away a beggar from her door without giving
aid. She bore all these expenses personally.
During
the Sino-Japanese War (1894-95), a shell demolished
a wall at Little Crossroads (as her compound was called);
and other sections were damaged. Missionaries fled
on a U.S. warship, but Lottie, then on her way back
from Pingtu, did not try to join them. Hartwell soon
returned, and peopled flocked to hear him preach.
His missionary daughter, Anna, left Canton to join
the Tengchow mission and aided country work, relieving
strain on Lottie's throat. Lottie's goal: visit 200
villages each quarter.
"I
fear you work yourself too hard," Corresponding
Secretary R.J. Willingham wrote her. But at the same
time, in response to her continuing appeals for recruits,
he told her new missionaries could not be appointed,
due to the board's indebtedness. The news was disheartening,
but the forming of a new church in Pingtu city delighted
her. "I have never found mission work more enjoyable,"
she wrote. And later: "To go out daily among
a kindly people, amid enchanting views of nature,
everywhere one turns catching lovely glimpses of sea
or distant hills or quiet valleys, all that to me
is most delightful. I constantly thank God that He
has given me work that I love so much."
In
1898 she began a day school for boys and girls together,
an innovation for Chinese. Teaching mainly involved
extensive memorization and, as was the practice, she
employed a Chinese teacher to lead memory drills;
Lottie gave the examinations every Monday. She visited
villages Tuesday through Saturday. Sundays were busiest.
Up at 6:15, she helped at the morning church service,
hosted the English-speaking community for a service
at Little Crossroads followed by dinner for the group
and taught an afternoon Sunday School class. Later,
she led a special class at her place for boys and
girls. After reading and some writing, including her
diary, she retired at 10 p.m.
Disease,
exhaustion and despair at the lack of recruits felled
Hartwell, his daughter and other missionaries for
long periods. More often than not, Lottie was the
nurse, especially for women and children. In all this
she kept herself disciplined, writing a friend: "When
I think myself threatened with nervous prostration,
I quit work at once and take perfect rest. Not all
people have the resolution to do this, and of course,
not all are so situated that they can do it. I argue
thus: I refuse to go any longer. I rest. I get well
in a month or so and then take up my work."
Willingham
greatly admired Miss Moon, almost as much has had
Tupper. "I wonder," Willingham wrote, "if
you know how much the brethren of the Board think
of you and your work." At the same time he announced
that new missionaries were coming-at last. In mid-1899
the J.W. Lowes settled in Pingtu. Also, after years
of Lottie's pleading, a single woman, Mattie Dutton,
arrived early in 1900. Lottie welcomed her to Little
Crossroads, helped acquaint her with language and
customs and later took her on country tours to train
her.
Boxers,
as those in the violent and anarchistic uprising were
called, opposed foreigners and any modernization.
They became most violent in 1900. Roving bandits murdered
every foreigner they could-especially missionaries.
Thousands of Chinese Christians died during this time.
Among
Baptists of north China, those in Pingtu suffered
most. Warned against going there, Lottie-disguised-risked
her life to reach the city. She slicked back her hair
and donned a Chinese man's long robe and the red-buttoned
cap designating officials. Engaging a sedan chair
she sat, arms folded, at the front opening and looked
condescendingly from side to side in royal fashion.
Thirteen
Pingtu Baptists had been imprisoned and tortured.
Lottie offered encouragement to them and other believers,
enhancing her unique place in their hearts. But realizing
the best hope for the believers was to cut all ties
with foreigners, she returned to Tengchow in the same
way she had come.
The
U.S. consul ordered all foreigners to leave the province.
Lottie and other missionaries boarded a Chinese gunboat,
whose captain, a gracious Christian, opposed the uprising.
A U.S. ship took the Americans to Chefoo, and later
they reached Shanghai. Expecting a long conflict,
Lottie and Mattie Dutton sailed to Japan.
Welcomed
by Southern Baptist missionaries in Fukuoka, the two
rented a Japanese house. Lottie stayed nine months,
teaching English in a commercial school with her Bible
as textbook. She also taught private students; three
of these young men became Christians. Upon return
to Tengchow in April 1901, she resumed her schoolwork
and city and country visiting. Work flourished in
north China. Chinese Christians of Pingtu province,
entitled to large indemnity payments for the Boxers'
atrocities, refused all except that paid by persons
clearly guilty. This non-vengeful spirit won many
friends for Baptists.
Jessie
Pettigrew, first trained nurse the Foreign Mission
Board appointed, had grown up in Virginia as an admirer
of Lottie Moon. When she and another single woman
arrived early in 1902, Lottie, as usual, helped them
adjust.
The
board had adopted a policy-one Lottie suggested-of
providing each missionary a furlough after 10 years
on the field. As her furlough neared, Lottie was tempted,
as usual, to delay it, but factors-among them Eddie's
worsening health-drew her home. Eddie had sold the
Scottsville house and wandered from one boarding house
to another in North Carolina and Florida seeking a
healthful climate. She made occasional small loans
to the Foreign Mission Board and bought a $3,000 annuity
from the board, guaranteeing her a return of $150
a year for life, payments to go to Lottie should she
survive Eddie.
Lottie
made her furlough home at Crewe, Va., where a nephew
cared for her brother Isaac and his wife. Eddie joined
them. Lottie-now heavier, slightly grayed and missing
some teeth-dressed in black and traveled to visit
various relatives, churches and women's missionary
societies. Women everywhere heard her respectfully.
Relatives
tried to persuade her, after 30 years in China, to
retire. "Oh, don't say that you don't want me
to return," Lottie pleaded. "Nothing could
make me stay. China is my joy and my delight. It is
my home now." At age 63 she sailed from San Francisco,
Feb. 27, 1904, sharing an economy cabin with two strangers.
Back at Little Crossroads, she happily donned her
modest Chinese robes and 67-cent, cardboard-soled
fabric shoes to resume work.
The
board began a policy-one Lottie supported-that missionaries
must study the language two years before undertaking
major mission responsibilities. Among new recruits
were the Jesse C. Owenses, W.C. Newtons, Ella Jeters
and Ida Taylor. Former members of the mission who
had defected to T.P. Crawford's Gospel Mission, returned
to the Southern Baptist fold on the recommendation
of Mrs. Crawford after her husband's death.
Progress
continued. The board's first hospital on any field
opened in Hwanghsien, conducted by Dr. T.W. Ayers.
A theological school and a girls' training school
were begun in Tengchow. China was making progress
also. With abolishment of the classical examinations,
formerly offered in Tengchow, the city declined, and
the theological and training schools were moved to
more-prosperous Hwanghsien. Chinese Christians took
the lead in combating the practice of binding girls'
feet, organizing the Heavenly Foot Society. Parents
of most girls in Baptist schools allowed daughters
to unbind their feet; some schools no longer accepted
girls with bound feet.
Even
as a veteran, Lottie at times still used a teacher
to drill her in niceties of the spoken language and
to help in writing materials. She paid her teacher
and all her servants-from personal funds. She continued
her school for girls and boys; grown men now clamored
for admission. She organized other schools to help
meet the new, widespread desire for education, still
using the Christian catechism and Bible stories as
basic texts, plus courses in arithmetic, geography
and classical Chinese literature.
Rigors
of frontier life and work continued to thin the ranks.
At Little Crossroads Lottie nursed Mattie Dutton,
who had a nervous breakdown, but the younger woman
never again was able to resume mission work.
Despite
her age and circumstances, Lottie remained in fairly
good health. Her schools were growing, and she put
even more of her own funds into them. She kept up
local church work, the English-language service, two
Sunday School classes in different parts of the city,
and her visiting in Tengchow and the villages. Her
guestrooms at Little Crossroads were in constant use
with sometimes as many as 15 Chinese guests (at Lottie's
expense).
With
other missionaries transferred to more fruitful fields,
she was now alone in Tengchow except for Ida Taylor,
who later contracted three types of smallpox simultaneously,
and was never able to return to work, though Lottie
cared for her. New recruits arrived for inland stations;
two more hospitals were opened in north China.
While
two single women recruits studied Chinese life with
Lottie, they noticed during devotions that her Scripture
reading did not correspond with their Bibles. One
asked what Lottie was reading from. "Oh, the
Greek," she replied, continuing her translation.
She translated with the same facility from Greek to
Chinese.
Willingham
became the first Foreign Mission Board official to
tour the Orient, visiting north China in October 1907.
Shantung Baptist Association was to meet in Tengchow,
but an outbreak of meningitis in the schools forced
transfer to Hwanghsien. Later the Tengchow area suffered
a siege of bubonic plague.
New
missionaries included Dr. and Ms. James Gaston-he
opened the third hospital, at Laichowfu-and Wayne
Adams, a tall, young bachelor. They all had been influenced
to come to China by Lottie Moon and her story. Adams,
an admirer, for a year took his meals with her (paying
his part), often followed by discussions of Chinese
life, language, theology, literature or current events.
He regarded this as a liberal education. When Floy
White arrived to marry Adams, Lottie oriented her
also.
On
Jan 11, 1909, Adams found Miss Moon nervous, her eyes
cloudy. Years later he learned that a letter had just
brought tragic news: Sister Eddie, living in a tiny
cottage in Starke, Fla., finally had given up in her
search for health and holiness. She lay on her bed,
pulled the covers over her, put a gun to her head
and took her life. Long in a disturbed emotional state,
Eddie Moon in a sense had continued to live in China
through Lottie. Eddie wrote cheerful letters to her
older sister, who faithfully replied. The two sisters
loved each other more than anyone else. But Lottie
bore her grief alone; she did not tell her associates,
but went on with her hard, dawn-to-dusk schedule.
In
the fall of 1911 women from three women's missionary
societies met in Lottie's living room and organized
the Woman's Missionary Union of North China. They
elected Lottie president.
One
new missionary Lottie helped adjust was Jane Lide,
another who had been reared on stories about Lottie.
The veteran taught her how best to visit in the city
and in villages. Jane was a good student. As the two
walked one day beside the Tengchow city wall, a mounted
Chinese soldier galloped toward them on the path.
Jane prepared to step aside onto the narrow, slippery
ledge between the path and a partially filled moat.
Lottie stopped her. "Don't worry, Jane,"
she said. "I'll teach him some manners."
Lottie
stood fast, tightening her hold on her umbrella. As
man and mount bore down upon the two, threatening
to knock them into the moat, Lottie suddenly opened
her umbrella. The horse shied, throwing the rider
into the moat. The two women walked on, while the
angry but chastened soldier picked himself up out
of the water.
China's
revolution broke out late in 1911. Fighting was intense
around Baptist mission stations in north China. The
U.S. consul asked missionaries in Hwanghsien to move
to a safer port city, and they agreed-all but Lottie.
When she learned Chinese hospital personnel had been
left alone in Hwanghsien, she made her way safely
through warring troops and took charge at the hospital,
encouraging the terrified nurses and other personnel
by her courage.
They
resumed work caring for the ill and wounded. When
Dr. Ayers and other male missionaries risked their
lives to return, they were amazed to find Lottie directing
the hospital efficiently, as she had done for 10 days.
With
the hospital in rightful hands, Lottie packed to return
home, but the men warned that heavy fighting made
this impossible. When she insisted, they sent word
to the opposing generals that Miss Moon would be passing
through at a set hour. A young missionary escorted
her, and as they made their way through the battle
lines, firing stopped on both sides.
Revolutionary
forces won early in 1912. Under the lead of Sun Yat-sen
and Yuan Shih-kai, a personal friend of Lottie and
other missionaries, a republic was established with
a Christian calendar and a declaration of religious
liberty. Lottie was delighted, but other developments
saddened her. These were destined to break her spirit.
Famine,
no stranger to China, broke out in unusual severity.
Churches around Pingtu were multiplying under vigorous
evangelism by Lottie's beloved pastor Li. But Lottie
wept to think of people in the area living-if they
did live-on ground leaves, roots and sweet potato
vines.
Plague
also ravaged the land. Lottie and other missionaries
gave all they could to relief agencies, and they continued
to help all who came to her door. The Foreign Mission
Board's debt was a crushing concern. With church members
in America not trained in systematic giving, the board
had proceeded on faith to expand its work in many
lands; there were now 273 missionaries.
Willingham
wrote Lottie in August 1911: "It is difficult
to know how to plan. Our indebtedness has been so
great it will take over $600,000 to carry out the
work which we had already planned for and meet the
debt. Last year our receipts were only $500,000. We
are trying to be very careful." A week later
he wrote, "We are in an embarrassing position
on account of our debt. We do not know what to do."
Lottie made rather large gifts to the board (the income
from Eddie's annuity for certain periods) to help
relieve the pressures. In midsummer 1912 he was still
mission secretary, always pleading with the board
for new missionaries.
When
the Gastons visited her at summer's end, all seemed
in order. But in Lottie's heart the burdens were piling
up. The immediate need: the suffering around her.
Her compound was no longer an informal training school
for Chinese women but a hostel for the ill and indigent.
She
buried herself in China's misfortunes, trying to help
and no longer taking care of her needs. Her small
cash reserves were gone. She gave and gave, not counting
the cost to herself. She almost stopped eating. If
others could not have food, neither would she. Her
strength failed.
Alarmed,
young colleagues sent for medical help. Missionary
nurse Jessie Pettigrew came from Hwanghsien, discovered
and treated a large carbuncle at the base of Lottie's
ear and took her home with her. Lottie dozed by day,
tore her hair and refused to eat. Missionary doctors
tried to help. Dr. Gaston, early in December, gave
his diagnosis: She was starving herself to death.
The
doctors decided her only hope for survival was a voyage
to America. As Dr. Hearn packed her in pillows for
the long day's shentze ride to the coast, she sat
up.
"Just
lay down, dear Miss Moon," he implored.
The
old, precise, literary Lottie Moon erupted. "I
will not lay down, sir," she corrected. "I
will lie down."
Cynthia
Miller, missionary nurse, went with Lottie, whose
slight, self-starved body was said to weigh only about
50 pounds. Miller arranged to sleep in Lottie's ship
cabin to care for her. Hearn brought aboard a supply
of Lottie's favorite grape juice and other food. He
doubted she would survive the trip, but felt it her
only hope. Lottie dozed most of the time or was otherwise
unconscious.
After
a few days she roused, took some juice and spoke weakly
but rationally about spiritual things. She whispered
the words of the song with her companion, "Jesus
Loves Me," and asked the nurse to pray for her.
Next morning Lottie no longer spoke, but pointed upward
when her nurse neared, indicating the source of her
life.
The
ship docked in Kobe, Japan, one of Lottie's favorite
places, to take on coal. On Christmas Eve 1912 she
opened her eyes, smiled and looked around. With her
last remaining strength, she raised her fists together-the
fond Chinese greeting. She must have been greeting
her Lord, for in that moment her spirit went out to
meet Him.
Her
remains were cremated, by Japanese law. Nurse Miller
delivered the urn of ashes to a board representative.
Her life was never the same for having been with Lottie
Moon. The same can be said of thousands of others-in
American and in China.
The
Christmas offering, launched at her suggestion, was
named for her in 1918.
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