American Minute with William J. Federer

Tuesday, February 19, 2008
By Steve Farrell

The groans of a dying man kept him awake in the little inn outside New York, but he was hardened to the cries because a college friend at Brown University had persuaded him to be an atheist. The next morning he learned the man who died in the night was none other than his college friend. This rude awakening led him to become America’s first foreign missionary. His name was Adoniram Judson, born in Massachusetts, August 9, 1788. At age 23, Adoniram Judson, and his wife, Ann, age 22, set sail from New England on FEBRUARY 19, 1812. Arriving in Calcutta, India, the British East India Tea Company did not want missionaries evangelizing Hindus as it might hurt their business, so the Judsons were ordered to Rangoon, Burma. They learned to speak Burmese, translated Scriptures and started schools. Adoniram was imprisoned during the Burmese War, but eventually gained respect from Burmese and British officials for having translated an English-Burmese Dictionary and the Bible. By Adonirum’s death, there were 63 churches, 123 ministers and over 7,000 baptized Christians in Burma. Adoniram Judson wrote: “How do Christians discharge this trust committed to them? They let three fourths of the world sleep the sleep of death, ignorant of the simple truth that a Savior died for them.”

William J. Federer is a best-selling
author. His latest book is “What
Every American Needs to Know about the Quran: A History of Islam and the
United States.”
Federer is available for speaking
engagements.

Mr. Federer is a contributing editor at Stiff Right Jab, and the Liberty Letters

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Liberty Letters editor Steve Farrell is a pundit with America's Newspage, Newsmax.com, associate professor of political economy at George Wythe College, and the author of the highly praised inspirational novel, "Dark Rose." | More from Steve Farrell

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