St. Patrick: The Missionary Who Returned to His Enemies
St. Patrick: The Missionary Who Returned to His Enemies
By Bede
Their grassroots evangelism was both rigorous and steadfast. “Early we woke up and cooked our food, had a devotion, then packed up our literature. After that we would go for outreach, and would cover every house and shop in the whole city. Then we came back for lunch.â€ÂAfter lunch they had Bible study. In the evening they went back out for evangelism, in partnership with local churches.“I was 21 years old, living by faith. If we didn’t sell books, we would not have something to eat. If it rained and we couldn’t go out, that was a fasting day. The tracts and books would sell for one rupee to five rupees. But we always had enough. It was learning a faith life.â€ÂThe grueling pace took a toll on Matthew physically. He had a bout with diarrhea that lasted six months. Twice he had dysentery. His pants would not stay on so he bought a rope he fashioned into suspenders and put his shirt on the outside so nobody would know how thin he had become.“I didn’t shower so I smelled dirty. Nobody really took care of me and I didn’t take care of me. We were always doing the work. We thought tomorrow will be better.â€Â“During those days, I also got malaria for the first time. Once I went to the washroom toilet and passed out. Another person was waiting and they forced open the door and took me out.â€ÂFortunately, his director’s wife happened to be a medical nurse and they took him to the hospital the next day. He received malaria medication and began to improve within three days.When he had the malaria he thought he might die, so he penned a letter to his family to inform them. His youngest brother saw the letter and wrote back to him: “My dear brother, I read your letter…if you need to die for the gospel in north India, please die. When it comes to our turn we will come and continue the work.â€Â
Matthew’s younger brother has become a powerful servant of God, a journalist who has written several books, and a well-known preacher.The Lord brought healing to Matthew. As the work continued, after a time of prayer and fasting, he began to sense that God was bringing a change to his ministry.The director told him he had been praying about a training program for church planters. Together, they launched a training program called the School of Evangelism. “We selected 12 people and trained them for a month and sent them to six fields where there was no Christian witness, no missionaries, nothing.â€ÂWhen they returned after six months, Matthew received them, went out with them for outreach, spent another month of training, then three months outreach in the mission field.“It was very effective,†he says. “New fellowships started. Many miracles took place during the outreach. These people continued to stay in the field and do the work, and then we trained the next batch of people for nine months in the classroom and sent them out.The training program they developed became a three-year bachelor program. Matthew headed their new institute for 17 years, training hundreds of men and women.A time for marriageIn 1990 Matthew’s father came to visit him in north India. When he surveyed everything his son was doing he said, “You need a wife to help you. Are you interested in marrying?â€Â“Yes, but not now. I’m not ready yet,†he told his father.“If you want to marry, marrying early will be better,†his father replied.In obedience to his father, Matthew traveled to his parents’ home in south India. After he arrived, his father took him to the house of a young woman named Amoli, who was currently working as a nurse.“I told her parents that I want to talk to the girl alone and we sat together in her room and I told her I’m a missionary working in north India. I don’t have any salary or support, no house, and I don’t promise you a house, clothes, food or anything. If God gives we will receive with thanks. If not, we will live in any situation, even if it includes sleeping on the roadside.â€ÂAmoli said she would think about it.Then Amoli’s parents and siblings came to visit the home of Matthew’s parents.They lived in a parsonage that was created by running a curtain through the middle of the modest structure they used as a church. “That was a 20 by 40 hole with a curtain in the middle. Half was our home and half was the church.â€ÂAmoli’s family surveyed the humble abode. “Is this your house?†Amoli’s oldest brother asked.“No,†Matthew’s father replied.“Do you have a house?“No,†he repeated.“Do you have land anywhere?†the young man wanted to know.“No…it’s not that we don’t have them, we are proud we don’t have houses or land.â€ÂAfter they left, Amoli’s family argued among themselves about the marriage. As the argument raged, finally Amoli’s mother stood up and said, “This is our daughter and we decide for her. We are going to get her married to this boy.â€Â“Her mother was a prayer warrior and strong believer in the Lord,†Matthew says. “A year before I reached their home a man of God went to their home and told them next year I will send a man of God for Amoli. You should get your daughter married to him.â€Â“Three months later another man of God went to the house and said the same thing.So the parents knew something was coming from the Lord.â€ÂMatthew and Amoli married shortly after that and have enjoyed a wonderful marriage, sustained by faith in the One they serve.About 10 years ago, after a time of prayer and fasting, Matthew began to sense change was coming into his life once more. He attended a Global Disciples conference and felt the Lord’s leading to “have something to do with it.â€ÂAfter joining Global Disciples, Brother Matthew initiated 18 discipleship training programs before serving as a facilitator with them, working alongside and equipping training directors in north and central India. Later he was given responsibility for south Asia, which has involved extensive traveling. “My wife and children are standing with me and I praise God for that,†he notes.“Jesus said to go to the whole world and preach the gospel to all nations, and according to that word there should be no unreached nations,†he notes. “Where are those unreached nations that my disciples will be the first to reach with the gospel? What are those totally dark areas where my disciples will bring the first to carry the light?†he asks.“We want to nurture what is growing and multiplying. We want to invest in things that multiply. Not just addition, but multiplication.â€ÂGod Reports Discover more from Church News
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
What is your reaction?
Excited
0
Happy
0
In Love
0
Not Sure
0
Silly
0


















You must be logged in to post a comment.