Robert A. Jaffray
Robert A. Jaffray | |
---|---|
Born | Robert Alexander Jaffray 1873 |
Died | 29 July 1945 |
Occupation | missionary statesman, pastor, preacher, writer, editor |
Spouse(s) | Minnie Jaffray |
Robert Alexander Jaffray (1873 - 29 July 1945) was a missionary to China, Indonesia and several other countries, with The Christian & Missionary Alliance, who served as the founding principal of the Alliance Seminary, in Hong Kong, and principal contributor and editor of the Chinese language Bible Magazine. Jaffrey founded the first Chinese missionary society called the "Chinese Foreign Missionary Union," in 1929.[1] His life is chronicled in the biography, Let my people go!: The life of Robert A. Jaffray (1947), by A.W. Tozer.
Contents
Background
Robert Jaffray, was born in 1873 into a wealthy family of which his father owned Canada's Toronto Globe (today’s the Globe and Mail). Robert's father had great ambitions for his child, wanting him to one day become the CEO and owner of Toronto Globe.
Calling to Missionary Service
As a young man, Jaffray sensed that he had a calling to become a missionary. After having an encounter with the founder of The Christian & Missionary Alliance, A.B. Simpson, Jaffray decided that his calling was to serve as a missionary to China. His father was deeply opposed to this and threatened not to pay for his expenses to travel to China, although he would be willing to pay for the return trip if young Robert ever wanted to return from his long term missions.
Missionary Work
The Christian & Missionary Alliance sent Jaffray to Wuzhou, Guangxi, China, in 1897. He served as leader of all C&MA work in south China. While he was there, his responsibilities included mission administration, preaching, evangelistic itineration, assistance in founding the Wuzhou Bible School (later called the "Alliance Seminary in Hong Kong"), editor of the Chinese "Bible Magazine", and writer for his publications. The Chinese-language Bible Magazine, which he edited and for which he wrote many of the articles, was read in Chinese communities all over the world. Jaffray was known for his leadership qualities and was called a "missionary strategist and statesman." He wrote for and edited, Bible Messenger, published by South China Alliance Press. He used this publication to send training materials to Cantonese missionaries and then later to others, reprinted in their "colloquial language versions."
Jaffray served in Wuzhou for 35 years, in spite of a heart condition and diabetes. In 1942, Japan invaded the island where he was stationed with his wife, Minnie,[2] and his daughter. Soon after the invasion, Jaffray and other missionaries were arrested by the Japanese, and sent to internment camps. Jaffray remained captive until his death in 1945 from illness and malnutrition.[3]
Quotes
- "The supreme and crying need of this lost world is the Gospel. Shall we not rise at Christ's command to carry the blessed saving news to every perishing one?"
References
Sources
- Tozer, A.W. Let my people go!: The life of Robert A. Jaffray (1947) ISBN 0-87509-189-X
- To All People, Niklaus
- Indonesia August 2004: Field Facts: Working the Soil
- Pages using infobox person with unknown parameters
- Infobox person using religion
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Canadian evangelicals
- Members of the Christian and Missionary Alliance
- Christian missionaries in China
- 1873 births
- 1945 deaths
- World War II civilian prisoners held by Japan