Friday, 18 January 2013


Today in the Church Calendar we celebrate the life of Amy Carmichael. "One can give without loving, but one cannot love without giving." "Missionary life is simply a chance to die. “If I fear to hold another to the highest goal because it is so much easier to avoid doing so, then I know nothing of Calvary love” . Amy Wilson Carmichael (16 December 1867 – 18 January 1951) was a Protestant Christian missionary in India, who opened an orphanage and founded a mission in Dohnavur. She served in India for 55 years without furlough and wrote many books about the missionary work there. Amy Wilson Carmichael was born in the small village of Millisle, County Down, Ireland to David and Catherine Carmichael. Her parents were devoutPresbyterians and she was the eldest of seven siblings. One story of Carmichael's early life tells that as a child, she wished that she had blue eyes rather than brown. She often prayed that Jesus would change her eye color and was disappointed when it never happened. She loved to pinch her brother's cheeks to make the prettiest color blue in his eyes. But she always repented afterwards for hurting her brother. As an adult, however, she realized that, because people from India have brown eyes, she would have had a much more difficult time gaining their acceptance if her eyes had been blue. Amy's father died when she was 18. Carmichael was the founder of the Welcome Evangelical Church in Belfast. The Welcome’s story begins with Carmichael in the mid-1880’s starting a Sunday morning class for the ‘Shawlies’, i.e. the mill girls who wore shawls instead of hats, in the church hall of Rosemary Street Presbyterian which proved to be very successful. Amy’s work among the shawlies grew and grew until they needed a hall to seat 500 people. At this time Amy saw an advertisement in The Christian, by which an iron hall could be erected for £500 that would seat 500 people. A donation of £500 from Miss Kate Mitchell, and a donation of a plot of land from one of the mill owners saw the erection of the first "Welcome Hall" on the corner of Cambrai Street and Heather Street in 1887. Amy continued at the Welcome until she received a call to work among the mill girls of Manchester in 1889 before moving onto missionary work. In many ways she was an unlikely candidate for missionary work. She suffered neuralgia, a disease of the nerves that made her whole body weak and achy and often put her in bed for weeks on end. It was at the Keswick Convention of 1887 that she heard Hudson Taylor, founder of the China Inland Mission speak about missionary life. Soon afterwards, she became convinced of her calling to missionary work. She applied to the China Inland Mission and lived in London at the training house for women, where she met author and missionary to China, Mary Geraldine Guinness, who encouraged her to pursue missionary work. She was ready to sail for Asia at one point, when it was determined that her health made her unfit for the work. She postponed her missionary career with the CIM and decided later to join the Church Missionary Society. From their she travelled in Japan , Ceylon and later to finally found her Orphnage for Children where she found orphaned children sold to Hindu temples as shrine prostitutes where they would be brutally raped. Amy dedicated 55 years of her life to these children who had suffered such horrors. Today Stop the traffic and Hope for Justice carry on their work of rescuing children from darkness and bringing them into the fathers love. Amy Carmichael bio, accessed at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amy_Carmichael on 18 January 2013.

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