William Carey

Pioneer to India and Father of Modern Missions.

Known as the Father of Modern Missions, William Carey was the first missionary to India who served for forty-one years translating the entire Bible into Bengali. He is also known for being a shoemaker, pastor, founder of the English Baptist Missionary Society, botanist, cultural anthropologist, educator, author, social reformer, and the first to bring the printing press to India.

In 1761, William Carey was born to Edmund and Elizabeth Carey who were weavers by trade in England. When William was six, his father was appointed the parish clerk and village schoolmaster. William was also the oldest of five children.

At a young age, William hungered for historical and scientific knowledge, although he never had any formal education after the age of twelve. He turned himself into a productive self-educator and an enthusiastic reader. He delighted in books of travel and adventure and had a special interest with plants so that he crowded his room with various specimens of them. He made frequent excursions into the woods and across the fields, always on the alert to discover and identify a new bird or animal or plant. Even as a young child, he showed determination in completing anything he ever began, such as when he broke his leg after falling out of a tree to study a bird’s nest and went to retrieve it a third time with the cast on his leg.

hortly after his conversion and upon becoming a pastor, William read a book called “An Account of the Life of the Late Rev. David Brainerd” about David Brainerd’s missionary work among the Native American tribes in the United States, written by Jonathan Edwards. He also read The Journals of James Cook, the explorer, which most people in England would consider were merely thrilling stories of adventure. For the next five years, William would begin to devote his spare time to making maps of faraway lands and gathering data on their location, size, population, and religions. Both of these written accounts began to spark something in William and he became deeply concerned with sharing the gospel with people who did not have any access to a Bible or a church.

Father of Modern Missions

Pioneering a Legacy in Missions

A short story of David Barinerd

David Brainerd’s fervor and passion for the Lord and for lost souls is contagious and convicting. His life has inspired countless missionaries and preachers for centuries and continues to motivate people today.

In 1742, David Brainerd received his license to preach by Jonathan Dickinson, who later founded Princeton. Dickinson was also a Commissioner of Society in Scotland for Propagating Christian Knowledge, a Christian missionary sending organization. He tried to re-establish David in Yale, but with no breakthrough. After his unsuccessful attempt, he asked if David had considered becoming a missionary instead. After praying about it, Brainerd was overwhelmed by a strong desire that God wanted to use him in the work of missions to the lost souls of the Indians.

On November 25, 1742, Brainerd was examined for his fitness for the work and appointed as a missionary to the Native Americans along the Delaware River. His missionary commitment is expressed in his words:

“Here I am, Lord, send me; send me to the ends of the earth; send me to the rough, the savage pagans of the wilderness; send me from all that is called comfort on earth; send me even to death itself, if it be but in thy service, and to promote thy kingdom.””

Whenever David preached a sermon among the people, the entire tribe would fall down on their faces and weep for hours because they were concerned that they had never known about their great sin towards the Lord before. They discovered fierce longings in their souls for Christ, to save them from the misery they felt and feared. The Spirit of God was at work in awakening the native’s hearts and calling them out of their sin and shame while revealing His great love for them. David has several accounts in his journal where he tells the story of the Indian’s repentance and love for Christ.

Hudson Taylor