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The Life of Adoniram Judson - Thomas Sullivan

A video published by Christian Praise and Worship in Songs, Sermons, and Audio Books on April 30th, 2017

The Life of Adoniram Judson - Thomas Sullivan Sunday School class teaching on Judson’s conversion, call, trip to India, Burma, imprisonment up to the death of Ann Judson http://www.puritanaudiobooks.net/ SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/stack45ny SUPPORT CHANNEL: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5022374 Adoniram Judson playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLzOwqed_gET0VKrAGYamBdtP3tzkOyGVG ONE OF THE WORLD'S MOST HORRIBLE seventeen months of imprisonment was endured by Adoniram Judson from 1824 to 1825 at age 37. Little food was given to him. His feet were bound to a large bamboo pole, his hands to another, and at night his feet were lifted higher than his head. Thus he was to swing suspended on the small of his back, his feet tied to a raised pole. His heroic wife brought little bits of food to him, although she and the baby were near death at times themselves and eventually succumbed to the rigors of life in Burma. What was Judson doing during these days in prison? Translating the Bible, hiding his work in a hard pillow which nobody investigated. Adoniram Judson (1788-1850) Pioneer missionary to Burma. Adoniram Judson was the son of a Congregational minister. He taught himself to read at the age of three, and by his tenth year he knew Latin and Greek and was a serious student of theology. At the age of 16 he en- tered Brown University and was graduated three years later as the valedictorian of his class. At Andover Theological Seminary he could not get away from the words of a missionary appeal, "Go ye into all the world." In 1810 he helped form the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and, two years later, he and his new wife, Ann, sailed for India. When the government refused to allow them to enter the country, they went to Burma, where they worked for six years before winning a convert. During those years they were plagued with ill health, loneliness, and the death of their baby son. Judson was imprisoned for nearly two years, during which time Ann faithfully visited him, smuggling to him his books, papers, and notes, which he used in translating the Bible into the Burmese language. Soon after his release from prison, Ann and their baby daughter, Maria, died of spotted fever. Judson withdrew into seclusion into the interior, where he completed the translation of the whole Bible into Burmese. In 1845 he returned for a visit to America, but the burning desire to win the Burmese people sent him back to the Orient, where he soon died. As a young man, he had cried out, "I will not leave Burma, until the cross is planted here forever!" Thirty years after his death, Burma had 63 Christian churches, 163 mis- sionaries, and over 7,000 baptized converts.

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