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About the Book
"Confession Of Sin And Freedom From It" by Rudi Louw explores the concept of confession as a pathway to freedom from sin. Louw outlines the importance of acknowledging and repenting for sins, and offers practical guidance on how to break free from patterns of sin. The book emphasizes the transformative power of confession and encourages readers to embrace a life of spiritual growth and renewal.
Adoniram Judson
Born in Malden, Massachusetts, the son of Adoniram Judson, Sr., a Congregational clergyman, and Abigail (Brown), Judson graduated from Brown University (B.A., M.A.) and in the first class of Andover Theological Seminary (1810). His interest in missions began in 1809 when he read Claudius Buchananâs sermon âThe Star in the East.â With ministerial friends he started the Society of Inquiry, a seminary study group on missions. In 1810 he was licensed to preach by the Orange, Vermont, Congregational Association preparatory to the pastoral ministry; however, he had strong inclinations toward overseas missions. In June of that year, Judson, Samuel Newell, Samuel Nott, Jr., and Gordon Hall presented themselves to the Massachusetts General Association for missionary service, and the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) was formed as a result. Following an unsuccessful attempt to secure an appointment from the London Missionary Society in England, Judson persuaded the ABCFM to support three couples and two single men on a mission to the East. Judson was the lead candidate of the first commissioning service for the American overseas missionaries held at Salem (Massachusetts) Tabernacle on February 6, 1812.
Following a sendoff with great fanfare, Judson and his bride, Ann (Haseltine), sailed with the Newells for India in 1812. During the four-month voyage, the couple carefully studied the baptismal positions of the English Baptists in order to controvert the Baptist position; however, when they arrived at Calcutta, they adopted Baptist principles and were baptized by William Carey. Upon their change of sentiments, the Judsons resigned from the ABCFM and plans were laid for the creation of a Baptist mission society in the United States.
By order of the British East India Company, the Judsons were forced to leave India. Surreptitiously escaping to Rangoon, Burma (Myanmar), in 1813, they established a station that became the first mission of American Baptists. Their work included evangelism and Bible translation. In 1842, following completion of Judsonsâs first dictionary, the couple relocated to Ava, to establish greater influence with the government. However, Adoniram Judson was charged with being an English spy and was imprisoned in June 1824. In a 21-month period of incarceration during the Anglo-Burmese War, he suffered from fever and malnutrition and underwent a forced march. As a result of the courage and resourcefulness of his wife, he was released in February 1826 to serve as a translator for the Burmese government during negotiations for the Treaty of Yandabo. Ann Judson died of complications of smallpox later the same year.
To enlarge his efforts, Judson moved his mission to Moulmein in 1828. There, with the assistance of Jonathan Wade, he built a church and school and continued work on the Burmese Bible, which he completed in 1834. Later that year, he married Sarah Hall Boardman, widow of George Dana Boardman and a gifted linguist and teacher. In 1845, following the birth of their eight child, Sarahâs health declined and the Judsons embarked for the United States. Sarah died en route; Judson completed the trip and remained in the United States for nine monthsâ furlough. While his strength had been greatly reduced and he suffered chronic laryngitis, he was hailed as a hero throughout the Christian community.
While at Madison University in upstate New York, he met and married Emily Chubbock, a writer and educator. They returned to Burma in 1846 for continued work on an enlarged Burmese dictionary, which was finished in 1849. Shortly afterward, Judson contracted a respiratory fever and, attempting to travel to a better climate, died at sea.
Brackney, William H., âJudson, Adoniram,â in Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions, ed. Gerald H. Anderson (New York: Macmillan Reference USA, 1998), 345-46.
This article is reprinted from Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions, Macmillan Reference USA, copyright © 1998 Gerald H. Anderson, by permission of Macmillan Reference USA, New York, NY. All rights reserved.
single is never second best: enjoying godâs gift at midlife
Marriage is good â it was Godâs idea, after all! So, why doesnât he bring me a spouse? That question, so perplexing in our twenties and thirties, can become downright painful as the decades march us into middle age and our marital prospects diminish. After all, we know the statistics â thereâs a better chance of [insert extraordinary random occurrence] than of getting married after [insert any age over 39]. âA solitary life is not his plan for us whether we get married or not.â Does that mean we over-40 singles are doomed to lives of miserable loneliness? Most definitely not. First of all, we can forget about the statistics because, ultimately, only God determines who marries and who doesnât. If marriage is Godâs plan for us, sooner or later weâre going to get married. Even more importantly, we can be sure that a solitary life is not his plan for us whether we get married or not. God has designed us to live in community, in a family of believers, and his work in our lives aims to get us there: âGod settles the solitary in a homeâ (Psalm 68:6). The real question, therefore, isnât whether we will wind up alone; itâs whether weâre willing for Godâs provision of companionship to be something other than marriage. Do We Trust Him? Trusting Godâs provision doesnât mean, of course, that we wonât ever feel lonely. Just as there is a loneliness unique to marriage â in fact, the loneliest people I know arenât the single ones, but those in a difficult marriage â there are aspects of loneliness unique to singleness: Itâs what a young, single woman feels among friends whose conversations revolve around wedding plans. Itâs what a 30-something single feels when his maturity is measured by his marital status. Itâs what 40-year-olds feel when others make an erroneous link between their singleness and their sexual orientation. Singlesâ loneliness is also fueled by the marital happiness we perceive (or imagine) others are enjoying. Trusting God in the midst of all this pain isnât about looking harder for a mate or even praying for greater patience. Itâs about leaning more deeply into Christ and finding in the process all the blessings of union with him â a deeper, more joy-filled union than that of any human marriage. Thatâs why relief from the pain of unwanted singleness begins as we ask, Do I trust God ? We wonât trust him if we donât believe he is good in the way he governs the details of our individual lives â including our marital status. If we are single today, that is Godâs goodness to us today. Singleness Showcases What Marriage Canât As we rest in Christ and trust in the goodness of God, the loneliness of being single is transformed into an opportunity to build up the whole body of Christ. In other words, we can serve and glorify God not despite our singleness, but by virtue of it. âThe loneliest people I know arenât the single ones, but those in a difficult marriage.â As we trust Godâs good plans for us, we demonstrate, both to ourselves and to the people around us, that singles arenât to be pitied. And as we abide in Christ, we stop viewing singleness as a problem to be solved. Since there will be no marriage in heaven except the marriage between Christ and the church (Matthew 22:30; Revelation 19:7), singles are uniquely equipped to show others a preview of what heaven will be like. This is why singleness is actually a sign of hope rather than despair. We can showcase this hope to our married brothers and sisters by how we handle our singleness, and we can also display the compassion of Christ to other people who feel lonely. Part of a Greater Family As we watch our friends raise families, there is no need to feel robbed or shut out, because in the new-covenant era â our era â the family emphasis in Scripture is not mom, dad, and three kids. Itâs the church family. When the biblical priority gets reversed, it hinders rather than helps the growth of Godâs people. Of course, we must seek to uphold the importance of the nuclear family, but we donât want to make an idol of it. If we consider what the apostles emphasized, we see that their focus was much more on the Great Commission, personal holiness, and growing the church family. And it is this family from which no single Christian is to be left out. Privileged Calling As singles abide in Christ, we discover, often much to our surprise, that there are unique blessings that come with being single. At a purely practical level, we have more control over our time than our married friends. (I say âmore control overâ to correct the mistaken view that singles always have more time in general.) And the unmarried can more readily live out their personal preferences in planning social activities, vacations, and areas of service in the church and community. Singles encourage one another and glorify God as they identify their unique blessings, willingly embrace them, and put them to good use. The best privilege of being single is far and away the enhanced opportunity for discipleship and serving Jesus. This, more than anything else â including marriage â is how God remedies loneliness. And there is a satisfaction that comes from living out these unique advantages that our married brothers and sisters canât fully know. If we are willing â if we trust God â we will surely experience the value and rewards of singleness. âThe best privilege of being single is far and away the enhanced opportunity for discipleship and serving Jesus.â As we do, we come to value our lives â not despite our singleness, but actually because  of it. Women who have rarely or never been pursued by men, or men whose pursuit of women has been rejected (once or many times), often question their worth. It is to such that Christ comes, not to shore up their self-esteem, but to drive them to find him  as their worth. As we value Christ, our own value becomes clearer, and as that happens, we discover that somewhere along the way, weâve stopped defining our personhood and our well-being by our marital status. Singleness isnât second best. To the contrary, itâs a privileged calling with unique blessings to enjoy and to pour out for others. Are we willing to embrace it unless or until God calls us to marriage? Thatâs the real question. And those who say yes will never be disappointed.