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“Go Ye into All the World”
By Davis Bitton
Published
in 2000, Tom Hiney’s On the
Missionary Trail is a good read. The subtitle tells
more: “A Journey through Polynesia, Asia, and Africa with
the London Missionary Society.”
In
a survey of previous Christian missionary efforts, the
author reminds us that they were only sporadically successful.
Brief flurries of activity were succeeded by many decades
of just trying to hang on. At the end of the eighteenth
and the beginning of the nineteenth century, the Napoleonic
wars effectively cut off contact between England and scattered
missionaries.
In
1821, representing the London Missionary Society, Daniel
Tyerman and George Bennet
set sail. They had been carefully selected. Tyerman,
a clergyman, received a salary, but Bennet
wished to pay his own expenses. Their objective was to
visit the different Christian missions, stay long enough
to ask many questions and see things with their own eyes,
write up their findings, and eventually return to England.
The
scope of this journey boggles the mind. Even under present
conditions, such a journey would require complicated scheduling,
arranging local transportation and lodging, and an arduous
program of visiting and interviewing. In the 1820s, travel
on the high seas was by sail. On sea or on land the dangers
were innumerable.
Hiney does a good job, I
think, in staying out of the way. He lets the eyewitnesses
speak for themselves. We read extensive passages from
the journal of the missionaries. What we see, in other
words, is what the missionaries saw. We get their perspective
on the flora and fauna, the life and culture, and of course
the religion of many different countries.
The
response to Christianity in Polynesia, Asia, and Africa
varied enormously. Thanks in large part to the receptivity
of the king, Tahiti proved to be a fertile field. On
the other hand, New Zealand natives were hostile to the
religion and threatened to kill meddling Europeans. China,
where the tireless Matteo Ricci
had bravely introduced the Christian message in the sixteenth
century, was now, many generations later, officially closed
to Christian preaching.
Interestingly,
among the most formidable enemies of these devout Englishmen
were fellow Europeans, merchants and seamen, who docked
at island ports in order to get water and food and do
some trading. In India there were soldiers. Not surprisingly,
drunken brawls and fights were common.
Such
men were no paragons of culture and virtue. Not only
did they set a “bad example,” but they themselves had
little use for missionaries. Seen through their worldly
eyes, the missionaries were prudes and meddlers. Such
English or European adventurers, nominally Christian,
could be unfriendly and throw obstacles in the path of
our travelers.
It
is common in certain circles to see Europeans as evil
expansionists, whose greed pushed them to charge into
parts of the world that had previously been pristine,
peaceful, and harmonious. Environmentalists deplore
the destruction of rain forest and the assault on native
cultures.
We
recognize some truth in such criticism. But Tom Hiney
provokes further reflections on the ”noble savage.” That myth, with roots in the ancient world,
grew in early modern Europe and has become a trope in
many novels and movies. Of course a nonjudgmental attitude
is appropriate when studying other cultures rather than
a knee-jerk condemnation of everything that differs from
our own usages and mores. And who can deny that Europeans,
including their missionaries, were often crude and insensitive?
But
tribal warfare was also cruel. The cannibalism still
practiced by some Pacific peoples in the 1820s is — excuse
the expression — hard to stomach. Infanticide, the heartless
killing of children, was common.
In
Hawaii, the two English missionaries attended a prayer
meeting of native women. Six of these women admitted
to killing “from one to six of their progeny.” Another
had strangled babies for other women. “One of the mothers
before us said that she had destroyed her infant because
she was nursing one of the royal family; another, because
she did not like the encumbrance; and several, because
they wished to be at liberty to leave their husbands when
they were tired of them … It was acknowledged, also, that
women disposed to gad about, and live after their own
inclinations, thought that to suckle children impaired
their comeliness, and made them look old too soon.” The
Englishmen reported the meeting as they heard it.
Now
Christian, these women, full of remorse, welcomed the
possibility of forgiveness as taught by the missionaries.
It was people who had experienced the two systems, in
Tahiti as well as Hawaii, who expressed their gratitude
for the more humane ways that displaced inherited beliefs
and practices. With few exceptions, those who became
Christians didn’t want to return to what they themselves
now saw as degraded behavior.
Examples
of American and European cruelty are numerous, and the
materialism and raucous hedonism they often brought need
not be praised. But longing for the old ways can be carried
too far. It was the anthropologist Margaret Mead, as
I recall, who said that the life of the savage — the traditional
tag-word for those not yet affected by modern technology
and institutions — was solitary, nasty, brutish, and short.
She was using the famous line from Thomas Hobbes describing
the “state of nature.”
One
conclusion I draw from Tom Hiney’s
book is that, even with its inevitable limitations, travel
literature can be highly informative. Admittedly, we
get only the point of view of the traveler, who is often
poorly informed. But if the traveler is an acute observer
and asks intelligent questions, we can learn much from
his report.
What
about Mormon missionaries? They often live in foreign
lands. They write letters and diaries. Are these of
any value? Did they have any experiences comparable to
those of the two Anglican missionaries of the 1820s?
The
answer is an emphatic yes. Having read through many of
them in the preparation of my Guide to Mormon Diaries
and Autobiographies, I can say that many are fairly
routine in setting forth a daily round of preparing, tracting,
teaching, and meeting. So be it. Life for most people
everywhere consists very largely of routine.
Yet
there are also diaries telling of unusual experiences
and distant places. I think of Addison Pratt in Tahiti,
George Q. Cannon in Hawaii, Richard Ballantyne
in India, Joseph Henry Dean in Samoa, LaMar
Williams in Africa. The monumental diary of Wilford
Woodruff includes his own missions. The lonely but courageous
Mischa Markow
tells of his efforts to carry the gospel to Rumania, Bulgaria,
and other parts of eastern Europe.
Historians of the Southern States Mission cannot afford
to ignore the extensive journals of John Morgan. These
are examples; the list could be made much, much longer.
Mormon
missionary journals don't escape the built-in limitation of any first-person
account. They tell of events as seen by just one person.
But this is something. Factual data such as moves from
place to place, meeting certain people, baptisms, and
the like are almost certainly recorded accurately. Like
the Anglican travelers in Tom Hiney's book, some Mormon missionaries, not satisfied with
surface impressions, are perceptive. In describing their
own feelings and reactions they are, of course, authoritative.
We
can be grateful for those missionary diaries that open
up to later readers the fallible yet dedicated persons
who wrote them, show the triumphs and the tedium and opposition
that formed the warp and woof of their lives, and enable
us to pay tribute to those who have moved the latter-day
work steadily forward.
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© 2005 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
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Davis
Bitton is a retired University of Utah history professor. After
serving a mission in France, he graduated from BYU and then received
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton University. For ten years
he was assistant Church historian. His most recent books are "Images
of the Prophet Joseph Smith" and "George Q. Cannon: A
Biography." Davis had the good fortune and blessing to marry
JoAn, a convert and former missionary in Chile. Daughter of an immigrant
from Malta, JoAn edits a newsletter for Maltese Latter-day Saints
and missionaries. Davis and JoAn served as guides on Temple Square
for five years. They live on the lower avenues in Salt Lake City.
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