It Must Be Personal – The Story of a Young Skeptic Scott Pauley

Adoniram Judson was born August 9, 1788.  I first met him as a freshman in college through the pages of his life story.  Growing up in church I had heard the name of Adoniram Judson.  To me, he was a pioneer missionary to Burma.  Judson and his wife Ann were some of the first Baptist missionaries to be sent out of North America.  (Actually, they did not leave as Baptists but they arrived that way!)  Yet Judson was not always a missionary.

Adoniram Judson learned to read at the age of three.  He had a brilliant mind and a personality that attracted others to him.  By the time he was a young man many considered him a free thinker.

He knew all about the God of his father, the God of the Bible, and at the same time he knew nothing.  A Christian home is one of the great blessings of life.  Yet it is possible to grow up surrounded by truth without knowing Jesus Christ in a personal way.  At some point, every young person must cross the threshold from their parent’s faith to their own.

As a freshman at Brown University he began to question everything he had been taught growing up in a pastor’s home.  Much of this skepticism was planted in his mind through the influence of a fellow student named Jacob Eames.  Eames was an outspoken unbeliever.  It is impossible to exaggerate the influence of a single friend for good or evil.

Adoniram and Jacob spent most of their time in pursuing pleasure.  Their greatest aim in life was personal fame.  Little thought was given to eternity.  Then came the events of September, 1808.

It was late when Adoniram turned his horse into a small village inn.  There was only one room left and it was next to the room of a dying man.  Adoniram was determined not to allow thoughts of death to disrupt a good night’s sleep.

Through the night the groans of a dying man made it nearly impossible to rest.  Questions and fears filled his mind.  Finally as day began to break he dressed and went downstairs to pay his bill.  Little did Adoniram know that his world was about to change forever.

As he turned to leave he asked the innkeeper what had happened to the man in the next room.  The innkeeper replied with a serious tone that the young man had died.  The words seemed so final.

When Adoniram asked the name of the man the answer shook him to his core.  The dying man was a college student from Brown University.  His name was Jacob Eames.

Adoniram Judson had come face to face with death, with eternity.  His best friend had often laughed at the thought of death and together they had scoffed at the idea of heaven and hell.  But now everything was different.  Judson would later say that his thoughts were consumed with one word – lost.  Jacob Eames was lost.  He was lost.

It was this divine appointment that brought Judson to a realization of his own sin in the sight of a holy God.  What if that had been him?  Where would he spend eternity?

Judson placed his faith in Jesus Christ as his personal Saviour.  He would become a key figure in the record of world evangelism.  This one event was not the end.  It was the beginning, the beginning of an amazing adventure with God.  Every day I walk past a church pew in our Christian Heritage Center at Crown College that came from Adoniram and Ann Judson’s church in Salem, Massachusetts.  It is a constant reminder of what can become of one life when God becomes real to a man.

If you would like to read more about Adoniram Judson I would  recommend To the Golden Shore by Courtney Anderson.  Biography is a powerful tool.  Experiences cannot be repeated but truth applies to us all.  It must be personal.


Discover more from Enjoying the Journey

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Post Author

More from similar topics

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Recent Posts

A journey through 1 John reveals our place in the family of God, how we can have assurance, and that our joy is rooted in Christ.

Journey through 1 John

“Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile! Nathanael saith unto him, Whence knowest thou me? Jesus answered and said unto him, Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig tree, I saw thee.” (John 1:47-48)

Why the Story of Nathanael Sitting Under the Fig Tree Matters

It also discusses the Four Sermons in Haggai It is in that context that God raises up the prophet Haggai with four sermons in four months. The Word of the Lord comes to Haggai, and he preaches four sermons. Each one of them is dated for us. Each sermon targets a different problem. You can read them in Haggai chapters one and two. In his first sermon (Haggai 1:1-15), Haggai preached on the danger of waiting when we should be working. They were waiting for a sign to build. He said, You don't need a sign, you need to obey God. Haggai's second sermon (Haggai 2:1-9) explained the danger of lamenting the past and missing the present. They were sorrowing over the destruction of the past temple. God said, Build a new one. It was G. Campbell Morgan who said, “It is impossible to unlock the present with the rusty key of the past." Many people are bogged down in their past and miss the present. Keep in mind what is at hand and what is ahead. The third sermon he preached (Haggai 2:10-19) described the danger of seeing only the material and neglecting the supernatural. They could see the work that needed to be done, but they missed the fact that God had resources that would help them get it done. The Lord was behind all of this. The fourth sermon (Haggai 2:20-23) warned against the danger of recognizing who is against us and forgetting who is for us. They were concentrating on the opposition and forgetting that “greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world” (1 John 4:4). A journey through Haggai shows us the importance of performing the work that God has told us to do, and His glory in our obedience. Image leads to an overview of Haggai

Journey through Haggai

How Social Media Shapes Our Heart

How Social Media Shapes Our Hearts

1 Comment

  1. Roland Stone on May 15, 2012 at 9:28 PM

    this was a great read

Leave a Reply